Executive Summary:
Al-Mourabitoun (“The Sentinels”) is a violent, jihadist terrorist group in West Africa that aims to implement sharia (Islamic law). The group was formed from a 2013 merger between al-Mulathamun (“The Masked Men”) Battalion (AMB) and the Movement for Unity and Jihad in West Africa (MUJAO). Both groups were offshoots of al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM). In December 2015, al-Mourabitoun merged with AQIM after a joint attack on the Radisson Blu hotel in Bamako, the Malian capital. This attack signaled a declaration of unity between both groups. Al-Mourabitoun has since taken the lead in AQIM operations, including a high-profile attack on a U.N. base in northern Mali.
According to the United Nations, al-Mourabitoun established ties with local Libyan tribes and marginalized groups in early 2017 in order to expand its operations into Libya. On March 2, 2017, al-Mourabitoun merged with AQIM and the local Jihadist groups Ansar al-Dine and the Macina Liberation Front to form Jamaat Nusrat al-Islam wal Muslimeen (JNIM). The formation of JNIM represents al-Qaeda’s new emphasis on “unity” in order to strengthen jihadist groups and successfully implement sharia law in the Maghreb region.
Mokhtar Belmokhtar had previously split his AMB from AQIM in 2012. AMB orchestrated a January 2013 attack on a gas facility near In Amenas, Algeria, that left 38 civilians dead. In May 2013, AMB and MUJAO carried out twin suicide bombings in Niger that killed at least 20 people.
After AMB’s August 2013 merger with the Mali-based MUJAO to form al-Mourabitoun, the newly formed group claimed that the region’s jihadist movement was “stronger than ever.” Al-Mourabitoun announced its intentions to “rout” France and its allies in the region. The group carried out attacks against French interests in the region, African military units coordinating against Islamist forces, and African civilians.
Belmoktar has been falsely declared dead on numerous occasions. In 2013, the government of Chad announced Belmoktar had been killed in an antiterrorism operation in Mali. In early October 2015, an Algerian news channel reported that Belmoktar’s death had been announced by an al-Qaeda spokesman in a recorded audio message. A U.S. airstrike in Libya was reported to have killed Belmokhtar on June 14, 2015, although the United States has not confirmed his death. Al-Mourabitoun later denied Belmokhtar had been killed and declared him its official leader in July 2015.
Doctrine:
Al-Mourabitoun believes it has a “Shari’a-based duty” to unite Africa’s Muslims and Islamic movements against secular and non-Muslim influences, according to the Australian government. In particular, the group targets France and French interests in the region. The group’s stated goal is to “rout” France and its regional allies. To that end, al-Mourabitoun has accused France of killing “peaceful children, women and old men” during its 2013 intervention in Mali.
Both MUJAO and al-Mourabitoun originated as splinter groups of al-Qaeda’s affiliate in the region, AQIM. MUJAO’s stated goal was to spread jihad across West Africa. According to the Australian government, MUJAO objected to Algerian dominance of AQIM’s leadership. Al-Mourabitoun initially allied itself with al-Qaeda while remaining operationally independent. While co-founder Adnan al-Sahrawi declared the group’s allegiance to ISIS in May 2015, co-founder Mokhtar Belmokhtar rejected the pledge and stated that the group’s shura (advisory) council had not yet ruled on an ISIS alliance. Al-Mourabitoun officially realigned itself with al-Qaeda in 2015, and renamed itself “Al Murabitoon – Al Qaeda in West Africa.”
On March 2, 2017, al-Mourabitoun merged with AQIM, Ansar al-Dine, and the Ansar al-Dine sub-group Macina Liberation Front to form Jamaat Nusrat al-Islam wal Muslimeen (JNIM). JNIM announced Ansar al-Dine’s former emir, Iyad Ag Ghali, as its leader. Ghali claimed that the factions had united “into one group” operating under “one emir” after al-Qaeda “sought unification according to Sharia law.” While operating under a new name and new emir, JNIM appears to remain under the aegis of al-Qaeda. Ghali paid bayat (allegiance) to al-Qaeda central and AQIM emir Abdelmalek Droukdel, a.k.a. Abu Musab Abdul Wadoud.
Organizational Structure:
Al-Mourabitoun’s specific leadership structure is unknown, although the group’s leaders were subsumed under the AQIM branch in late 2015. The AQIM-affiliated group appears to be governed by an emir and a shura council that sets the organization’s agenda. Al-Mourabitoun has not publicly named most of its leaders, although co-founder Adnan Abu Waleed al-Sahrawi described himself as the group’s emir in a May 2015 declaration of al-Mourabitoun’s allegiance to ISIS. Co-founder Mokhtar Belmokhtar rejected the pledge a week later, raising the question of whether al-Sahrawi or Belmokhtar was more senior in the group’s hierarchy. However, Sahrawi split from al-Mourabitoun following his pledge of loyalty to ISIS. Belmokhtar revealed that al-Mourabitoun has a governing shura council, which he said had not yet approved the pledge to ISIS. Sahrawi died in a French drone strike in August 2021.
Al-Mourabitoun issued an online statement in July 2015 that its shura council had elected Belmokhtar the group’s new leader. In March 2017, two additional al-Mourabitoun leaders were revealed: Abderrahmane al-Sanhadji, al-Mourabitoun’s top judge, and Elhacen Al-Ansari, its deputy leader.
Following al-Mourabitoun’s March 2017 merger with AQIM, Ansar al-Dine, and the Macina Liberation Front into JNIM, the relationship between the groups has shifted from one of collaboration to a structured hierarchy with AQIM at the top. Ansar al-Dine emir Iyad ah-Ghali leads JNIM, but he has also reaffirmed his allegiance to AQIM emir Abu Musab Abdul Wadoud. According to Malian and Mauritanian security sources, al-Mourabitoun’s top judge, Abderrahmane al-Sanhadji, replaced Mokhtar Belmokhtar as emir of al-Mourabitoun after its merger into JNIM. Al-Mourabitoun and JNIM have not confirmed the change in leadership.
Financing:
Al-Mourabitoun is likely funded through kidnapping ransoms and criminal activities, according to the U.S. State Department. The group also likely receives funding through its connections to other terrorist organizations. MUJAO had previously received funding through regional drug smuggling. MUJAO had also been involved in a 2011 kidnapping of three aid workers in Algeria who were later released in exchange for a ransom payment.
Recruitment:
Al-Mourabitoun largely consists of former AQIM members who left with AMB and MUJAO. Al-Mourabitoun’s primary recruiting area includes northern and western Africa, particularly Algeria, Mauritania, Mali, and Niger. The organization relies heavily upon recruiting locally, as Malians now make up the largest ethnic group in al-Mourabitoun.
According to the United Nations, al-Mourabitoun established ties with local Libyan tribes and marginalized groups in early 2017 in order to expand its operations into Libya. However this is not the first time that al-Moutabitoun has tried to expand into Libya. In June 2015, a U.S. airstrike targeted Mokhtar Belmokhtar near Tobruk, Libya. In 2011, Belmokhtar visited an al-Qaeda training camp in Libya where he recruited the former al-Mourabitoun emir Abu Bakr al-Nasri.
Training:
Both of al-Mourabitoun’s emirs, Mokhtar Belmokhtar and his predecessor Abu Bakr al-Nasri, first trained and fought against the Soviet Union in Afghanistan in the 1980s. Both men trained in al-Qaeda training camps in the 1990s, and Belmokhtar first met and recruited al-Nasri from one such camp in Libya in 2011. French forces killed Nasri in April 2014.
AQIM previously ran a training camp in Timbuktu, Mali, until the camp was destroyed in an airstrike. Recruits ate, slept, and trained together in the camp. Al-Qaeda also utilizes proxy training facilities provided by like-minded groups.
Al-Mourabitoun’s leadership has maintained contact with AQIM, particularly through Djamel Okacha, AQIM’s leader in West Africa.
Also Known As:
- Al-Mulathamun Brigade
- Al-Mulathamun Masked Ones Brigade
- Al Murabitoon – Al Qaeda in West Africa
- Al-Murabitoun
- Al-Muwaqqi'un bil-Dima
- Khaled Abu al-Abbas Brigade
- Masked Men Brigade
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- Signatories in Blood
- Signed-in-Blood Battalion
- The Sentinels
- Those Signed in Blood Battalion
- Those who Sign in Blood
- Witnesses in Blood
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