The end of the Tuaregs in Niger, Chad, Mali and Cameroon, Algeria and Libya!

by Paschen | June 22, 2008 at 11:45 pm
1727 views | 29 Recommendations | 18 comments

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The end of the Tuaregs in Niger, Chad, Mali and Cameroon, Algeria and Libya!

The end of the Tuaregs in Niger, Chad, Mali and Cameroon, Algeria and Libya!

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uploaded by Paschen

By Uwe Paschen.


Soon we will see a title such as "the last of the Tuaregs" due to the fact that no one seems to care nor speak up for them and maybe because they do not have a country of their own with lots of Oil or a Touristic paradise with some great beaches, nor are they subdued and would not serve any one with a smile wile taking an order from an abusive customer!

The Tuaregs are proud people that have been around for longer then most Nations other than China and India that is. Yet they never had a nation of their own really. Since where they lived for the last 2500 years was a place no one really wanted to be any how. tautened

The Tuaregs are the masters of the Desert and have been nomads for over 2000 years now, mainly trading, salt, dates, sugar, silver, Sheep, Camels, Horses, leather, through out North Africa, West Africa, the Middle east and even East Africa. They are multi lingual as well, speaking Tamacheck their own Tong, as well as French, Arabic, Peul, and some times even Persian and Spanish! 

Yet since the end of the colonial powers and the creation of artificial boarders by the former Colonial powers dividing at random tribes, former Kingdoms, Soultanates and Ethnical groups, causing for great friction in Africa.

The Tuaregs find them self trapped by boarders they can not understand nor respect and by goverments that would like them to vanish for they are not obeying their some time strange and discriminating laws!

Until the Colonial Powers such as France, Great Briton, Italy, Spain and the Arabs took over the control of Africa the Tuareg Kingdom went all across the Sahel Desert, form the south of Morocco, true the south of Algeria and the south of Libya, all the way to the North of Chad, the East and North of Niger, the North tip of Cameroon all the way to the East and north part of To-days Mali! A remarkable land mass, yet one that is rather harsh and not-welcoming, with Temperature going up to as high as 60 degree Celsius in the day time and as low down to minus 5 degree Celsius at night! The extreme is so great at times that one can hear the rocks split under the stress of those temperature changes!

The Tuareg are simple and yet proud people. They give their last drink of water to a stranger in distress and this means the World in this part of the Earth. Yet They would fight to the death if someone was to take their freedom away!

Now since Uranium has been discovered and being mined in the Air Mountain in Niger the Tuaregs are in trouble, since this area is their home, their strong hold where for 2000 years the caravans came to exchange goods and fill up with water and new stories!

There is more to Agadez though, it use to have a university and many great intellectuals long before Europe even knew how to writ and read, the Roman destroyed the great Library in Mali and the one in Agadez as well, latter the Ottoman empire, the Spanish and the French did the rest!

The Housa goverment in the fertile south does not care about the Tuaregs nor they future. all it wants is the money from the Uranium and more power. Regarding the Tuaregs as a nuissance and at best as slaves if they would surrender! 

The Tuaregs however would rather die then give up their way of life, their freedom or even their believes!

Today I was told that my good childhood friend Aboubacar-Alla was shot by the Government troops in Agadez the main City in the Air Mountain and where I grow up my self. He did apparently tried to stop the Government Soldiers to arrest some Children and their Mothers. A tactic used to intimidate the Locals by taking Children and Mothers, Torturing them and some times killing them, knowing very well that the Tuareg do care very much for they Children and the Mothers of those as well!

Aboubacar-Alla and I grew up together, we hunted Snakes and scorpions as children and we gave our Fathers much grief with all our adventures and escapades! Yet we grow up and went to University in France and Germany to study Engineering so we could go back home and help our people!

He went back and stayed, keeping silent to avoid trouble with the Government, I had to leave, for I could not shut up and got my self into trouble.

Even though I caused trouble for my Father and Friends back then, they never blamed me nor condemned me for it. As I left all they said back then was watch out and do not get your self killed!

Today Aboubacar-Alla is dead, Shot by the government, he who stood silent so he could help was killed!

Soon if nothing changes in Niger I will have writ about the last of the Tuaregs. Going back has crossed my mind, but not with guns nor hate for I know it would not solve any thing nor would it bring justice even though at times like today I feel like taking back the Sword, I chose not to. I writ in stead and call many up, trying to get sanction against the Government and for the USA, Canada, France and China to stop buying Uranium from Niger, so the Tuaregs may be free again and given equal rights!

recommend This comment thread is now closed
stvalentine
stvalentine
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 01:48 on June 23rd, 2008

Paschen, I like this story. It's good stuff.

djermano
djermano
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 03:34 on June 23rd, 2008

Paschen, I like this story. It's good stuff.

Sorry to hear your friend was killed. Why do people resort to such acts? It solves nothing. Remember it is never the end, but always the beginning to live with our Lord and his goodness.

0
Paschen

Thank you all for your input, I did update some of the facts as I received more details!

I do appreciate the Comments! Thank you!

0
wyppensenwah

I would like to know, just how many people in the United States know who the Tuareg are? Frankly, unfortunately, not many. Fortunately, I am attempting to inform people about the Tuareg (though of course you know this is not their true name.), and it is a somewhat slow process. During my trips into Morrocco and other places, I have made a number of friends among them. But the problem is that not many people know about what has happened to them within the last thirty years. They do not realize how dangerous it has become for a Tuareg to be a Tuareg. Though I understand that you will know more than many of us of this current situation, it is somewhat disappointing that what is happening has not made a dent in the news that the U.S. populous has seen. In fact, what is currently happening is not being reported at all within the T.V. media, and has only made it into print, via a very small article. So once again a people are being killed and misplaced. I too, also wish I could go back and pick up my sword. Your article is important to us all, those who care about other people. We do not want another Darfur situation . THANK YOU FOR THE ARTICLE.

                                                      WYPPENSENWAH

 

0
djermano

I hope you not to pick up your sword, because that is the problem. There are other ways to communicate to bring an end to violence without using violence to try and achieve that goal. We all know it never works. If it worked; I ask you.....since throughout history, then, why do we still battle today? It is because swords and violence DO NOT WORK.

baiadha
baiadha
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 08:18 on July 9th, 2008

Paschen, I like this story. It's good stuff.

0
Paschen

Thank you for the Flag! It is a very important issue that is being forgotten by the G8 and even the G13!

René
René
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 10:04 on July 9th, 2008

Paschen, I like this story. this is so sad.

0
René

This is so awful. We were bad to the Native American tribes back in the 1800s, but not this bad.


0
René

Heads up, staff! This is a worthy story to be picked up by AP and to be paid for!!


0
Paschen

Thanks for the comment Rene! I wish this would wake some up and maybe help the Tuaregs in Niger as well as elsewhere!

0
Jordan Yerman

Thanks for updating this, Paschen. 

SOLARLIFE
SOLARLIFE
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 04:58 on July 12th, 2008

Paschen, I like this story. Thanks for explaining the Tuaregs story, I admit I didn't know that. In the press you hear only about conflicts. That is the good thing at NP you get popular understandable background information. Thanks for the effort, can we do something?

0
Paschen

Thank you for the flag SOLARLIFE, I appreciate it a lot! I do agree with your comment here, thank you for posting it!

I am in process to start up an NGO focused on Conflict zones such has this one, equipped with mobile Container on trucks to be able to move where the people are and get out of the shooting as well, equipped with hospital and emergency material, dental, maternal, paediatric and so on, as well as schools and shelters, food and WATER supplies. No religious or Political intervention or conversion, just Humanitarian and helping to get those people back on their feed and become self sufficient ASAP! Providing trained mediation may be an asset as well! I hope that JICA, BMZ and other will help on this and Solar Power will be needed as well!

Sanjay Jha
Sanjay Jha
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 22:05 on July 17th, 2008

Paschen, I like this story. It's good stuff.

0
Paschen

Thank you for the Flag here, it is a story very dear to me! I do appreciate it very much in deed!

1
Ineke Hemminga

Tanimert Uwe for this beautiful contribution on the tuareg people,

Ar assaghat,

Ineke (Tamanrasset Algeria)

www.Sahara-Art-Venture.com


1
Rezib Tutsanai'i

Greetings my brother. It is sad to hear the story that you tell, and yet we all must know that the this battle is being fought across the the homeland of humanity that Kem people call Merita or Tamert.

I have had the pleasure of meeting the Tuareg in Mali as I traveled through Toumboktu on the way to the Dogon highlands with my master, Naba Lamoussa Morodenebig, a Dogon High Priest who has opened again the mystery schools and the teachings of the Kem culture to the world. He told us of the time he spent in the desert among the Tuareg people. Of all of the places that he has traveled, he said that the desert was the most beautiful.

I have been monitoring the actions of the colonial powers as they have been closing in on Merita once again. I think that your decision to follow the way of peace is commendable. As a Kem, I have taken a vow never to kill or cause suffering to humans, and so I see that you are also a human being who has a sense of human quality.

I thank the ancestors for your words and your vision and I hope that they will watch over you and bless you and keep you safe from harm so that you can speak to the quality of humanity and seek to awaken the hearts of the world to the reality of what the colonial way of life is doing.

Hotep

Rezib Tutsanai'i
(Awakening Heart Image of The Son)
Fourth Generation Merr
The M'TAM School
The Earth Center


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First Flagged at 1:48 AM, Jun 23, 2008 by stvalentine
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