Stolen livestock from some West African nations have been finding their way into local markets in Ghana. Security experts are concerned that porous borders are facilitating jihadists' movement of the rustled animals.
Jihadists operating in the West African sub-region are now resorting to crossing over into Ghana with looted animals for sale.
According to officials in the West African nation, owners of these stolen animals oftentimes trace their cattle to local markets in the north of the country.
One of the popular destinations for the animals is the cattle market in Navrongo, near Ghana's border with Burkina Faso.
"Some of the cattle here are rustled and brought to the market for sale, but we won't know," Kwesi Adumbila, a well-known cattle dealer in the market, told DW.
"Others even cross the borders with the cattle to sell in Ghana. Those who cross the borders have their agents, who they meet in the bush for exchange."
The number of market destinations for these stolen cattle are fast increasing, according to Rev. Fr. Clement Aapengnuo, who works with COGINTA, an EU-supported community peace building NGO.
"When you look at the cattle markets that are coming up especially near border towns -- I hear a market has just come up in Banda Nkwanta," Aapengnuo told DW, referring to a town in the center of Ghana.
These rustled cattle attract buyers because of their low sale prices at the markets, according to Aapengnou.
"So, you go there, there are a lot of cattle that they are selling, and people are enjoying, they think this is cheap cattle we can buy and do ABCD, but they don't realize that by buying those cattle they are financing terrorism," he said.
Withdrawal zone for armed groups
A study by Promediation, a French NGO of mediation and negotiation experts, concluded that Ghana's proximity to the Cascades region of neighboring Burkina Faso, as well as Ivory Coast, makes northern Ghana an ideal cross-border withdrawal and control zone for armed groups.
Some of them run into Ghana for refuge, but their activities are mostly linked to arms, drugs, consumer products and cattle rustling.
"They use the money to buy small arms to restock and then to go back to fight," Aapengnuo said. "So, this also feeds into the idea that one of the reasons why Ghana has not been attacked is that Ghana is a refuge for the terrorists."
The Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized crime in its recent report on cattle rustling and Mali's war economy revealed that looted cattle from Mali are even reaching markets in Ghana and other West African nations.
"Cattle rustling cannot be dissociated from instability and conflict dynamics. In fact, it is a strong predicator of instability, as it marks the escalation of conflict and highlights strategies of armed groups and their levels of influence or control over specific areas," the report said.
It added, "as armed groups move towards new territories further south, and towards coastal West African countries, cattle rustling could be a marker of future conflict areas as well as of locations where armed groups need resources."
Tightening border security
Ghana's security forces have moved in to tackle the issue by setting up camps in areas close to its northern borders with Burkina Faso, Togo and Ivory Coast.
They want to control a possible spill over of terrorism, but it is hard to control illicit movement of animals into Ghana due to porous border controls.
Awal Ahmed Kariyam, a security expert whose organization RISE Ghana has been advocating for border security over the years, told DW that the accommodative posture of some Ghanaians is allowing crime to foster and gain grounds.
"We have a culture of highly accommodative nature of our people," he said.
"So, we have people coming from different jurisdictions, we basically do not question them. Some of these people may be violent extremists; however, they are also locals who are engage in cattle rustling."
The Global Initiative has recommended that cattle rustling assessments should be "used in early-warning stabilization operations, as is the case with other types of organized crime."
Edited by: Keith Walker
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