[REWRITTEN TITLE] [The Redrawing of North Africa’s Security Landscape: Migration, Conflict, and Collaboration] [ARTICLE BODY]
LONDON: A desert corridor connecting Libya, Tunisia, and Algeria has evolved into a critical battleground in North Africa’s escalating security crisis, where smugglers, militias, and state forces intersect amid shifting international diplomacy.
Transnational networks spanning the Sahel to Sudan now exploit porous borders, merging once-isolated security threats into a cohesive existential challenge that defies national boundaries.
On June 16, Libyan, Tunisian, and Algerian officials convened in Tripoli for the second session of a tripartite working group, underscoring a pivotal shift toward coordinated regional strategy over ad hoc bilateral solutions.
Chaired by Libya’s Interior Ministry, the talks prioritized collaboration against cross-border crime, including human smuggling, arms proliferation, and extremist financing.
The initiative reflects a strategic pivot: decades of fragmented governance are giving way to a shared recognition that territorial security cannot be ensured through isolated measures.
“The regional security architecture has been irrevocably transformed,” stated Virginie Collombier, president of Italy’s Mediterranean Platform, in an interview with Arab News.
She emphasized Algeria, Tunisia, and Libya’s holistic crisis, citing Sahelian violence percolating northward via historic migration routes.
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