Abidjan – Jihadist violence in the Sahel region is spreading to countries along Africa’s western coast, global conflict monitoring group ACLED said on Thursday.
In its conflict watchlist for 2026, ACLED noted the “consolidation of a new front line in the Benin, Niger, and Nigeria borderlands, which is now strategically important for both Sahelian and Nigerian militant groups”.
The Group for the Support of Islam and Muslims (JNIM) and the Islamic State – Sahel Province (ISSP) have “entrenched their presence in this tri-border area, transforming it into a conflict hotspot with implications for both the Sahel and coastal West Africa,” it said.
A recent attack in northern Benin, near the area where Benin, Burkina Faso, and Niger meet, led to the death of 28 Beninese soldiers. The army responded and killed about 40 of the attackers. These attackers are believed to be linked to Al-Qaeda groups coming from Burkina Faso, a… pic.twitter.com/rO58kv1bJk
— TYF Political Action Committee- TYF PAC (@TyfPacc) December 9, 2025
The NGO noted that Sahelian and Nigerian jihadists are gradually merging into a “single, interconnected conflict environment stretching from Mali to western Nigeria”.
Northern Benin, bordering Burkina Faso, Niger, and Nigeria, experienced its “deadliest year on record”, with nearly 70 percent more deaths than in the first 11 months of 2024.
According to ACLED, “political violence” also killed more than 10,000 people in Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger in 2025.
Jihadist armed groups have escalated their campaigns in the central Sahel this year, throwing the stability of the region’s military juntas into doubt, the NGO said.
In Mali, jihadists launched a fuel blockade in September, attacking fuel convoys from neighbouring countries for weeks. That was followed by violence in the country’s south and west, which reached “the highest monthly levels since ACLED began recording data in 1997”.
ACLED also pointed to “kidnapping campaigns targeting foreigners” by JNIM and ISSP, driving a record increase in Mali and Niger this year.
Follow African Insider on Facebook, X and Instagram
Picture: X/@TheModiak
For more African news, visit Africaninsider.com
Source: AFP

