At a market in Tougbo, a small town in northern Ivory Coast, the smell of dried fish and fried dough filled the air. Children ran around the bustling stalls where women sold the corn and cassava they had carried on their heads for miles in the countryside. Muslim elders watched the crowds on the sandy main street, while Christian worshipers poured out of church after Sunday mass.
Yet the bustle belied an insidious threat.
About half of terrorism deaths worldwide in 2023 were recorded in the Sahel, the arid region in West Africa known for its seminomadic tribes and ancient trade routes. Emboldened by their success in the landlocked nations of Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger, insurgents affiliated with Al Qaeda and the Islamic State are moving south toward the Atlantic and into coastal nations such as Ivory Coast.
Read it all (the headline posted here is from the print edition).
New story out this week based on a 500 mile trip last fall along the border between Ivory Coast and Burkina Faso to document how the Al Qaeda-affiliated JNIM is moving south from the Sahel towards coastal countries. pic.twitter.com/bfskZC5ewO
— Elian Peltier (@ElianPeltier) June 17, 2025
