09-18-2016, 07:01 PM
Madagascar
Malawi
Mali - Open conflict with the Legion
Mauritania
Mauritius
Morocco - Pursuing legal action against the Legion
Mozambique
Namibia
Niger - Open conflict with the Legion
Modern Niger lays claim to its northern regions by means of lines on a map only. Much of northern Niger has become uninhabitable due to loss of ground water and the unchecked spread of the Saharan desert, with most of its approx. 7 million people living within a hundred kilometers of the N1 highway, a hold over from the last years of Chad Lake and the main source of water in the region. A brief period from 2010-2019 saw major social and economic reform in Niger under its first democratic government, a state which ended with a military coup led by the Presidential Guard, a relatively newly formed military formation that was stood up in response to suspected corruption in the military.
It was discovered too late that the officers of the Presidential Guard were behind the growing suspicions of corruption, intent to put themselves in a position to execute a successful coup of their own. This led to a decade long civil war, as elements of the Niger military loyal to the ousted government and new constitution battled against the better equipped Presidential Guard and military units which had sided with them.
Modern Niger is a military dictatorship. Over 10 million Nigerien people died or fled during the civil war. Slavery is common practice in the region, a continued practice that had begun to decline in the early 2000's.
Nigeria - Open conflict with the Legion
One of few countries with an existing and still profitable military industrial complex in the region, Nigeria has supplied weapons, equipment, and ammunition to its allies for much of the past twenty years. After two decades of combating Boko Haram in the north-east, rampant and blatant corruption in the military and government, as well as much of its economic and manufacturing sector, a populist movement uprising took over.
Little changed on the surface, as it was later discovered the movement was organized by political opposition parties to execute a 'clean' coup of the existing government.
Modern Nigeria has been accused repeatedly of selling arms and equipment to terrorist and belligerent forces across Africa, and often for supporting both sides in conflicts. Most recently, it has found itself accused by the Legion for funding and arming conflict parties in Sierra Leone and Liberia.
Rwanda
São Tomé and Príncipe
Senegal - Legion Controlled
Seychelles
Sierra Leone - Legion Controlled
Somalia - Al Janyar control
South Africa
South Sudan - Open conflict with Al Janyar
Sudan - Open conflict with Al Janyar
Swaziland
Tanzania
Togo - Legion aligned
Tunisia - Legion aligned
Uganda - Open conflict with Al Janyar
Zambia
Zimbabwe
Edited by Jacques, Nov 7 2017, 08:11 PM.
Malawi
Mali - Open conflict with the Legion
Mauritania
Mauritius
Morocco - Pursuing legal action against the Legion
Mozambique
Namibia
Niger - Open conflict with the Legion
Modern Niger lays claim to its northern regions by means of lines on a map only. Much of northern Niger has become uninhabitable due to loss of ground water and the unchecked spread of the Saharan desert, with most of its approx. 7 million people living within a hundred kilometers of the N1 highway, a hold over from the last years of Chad Lake and the main source of water in the region. A brief period from 2010-2019 saw major social and economic reform in Niger under its first democratic government, a state which ended with a military coup led by the Presidential Guard, a relatively newly formed military formation that was stood up in response to suspected corruption in the military.
It was discovered too late that the officers of the Presidential Guard were behind the growing suspicions of corruption, intent to put themselves in a position to execute a successful coup of their own. This led to a decade long civil war, as elements of the Niger military loyal to the ousted government and new constitution battled against the better equipped Presidential Guard and military units which had sided with them.
Modern Niger is a military dictatorship. Over 10 million Nigerien people died or fled during the civil war. Slavery is common practice in the region, a continued practice that had begun to decline in the early 2000's.
Nigeria - Open conflict with the Legion
One of few countries with an existing and still profitable military industrial complex in the region, Nigeria has supplied weapons, equipment, and ammunition to its allies for much of the past twenty years. After two decades of combating Boko Haram in the north-east, rampant and blatant corruption in the military and government, as well as much of its economic and manufacturing sector, a populist movement uprising took over.
Little changed on the surface, as it was later discovered the movement was organized by political opposition parties to execute a 'clean' coup of the existing government.
Modern Nigeria has been accused repeatedly of selling arms and equipment to terrorist and belligerent forces across Africa, and often for supporting both sides in conflicts. Most recently, it has found itself accused by the Legion for funding and arming conflict parties in Sierra Leone and Liberia.
Rwanda
São Tomé and Príncipe
Senegal - Legion Controlled
Seychelles
Sierra Leone - Legion Controlled
Somalia - Al Janyar control
South Africa
South Sudan - Open conflict with Al Janyar
Sudan - Open conflict with Al Janyar
Swaziland
Tanzania
Togo - Legion aligned
Tunisia - Legion aligned
Uganda - Open conflict with Al Janyar
Zambia
Zimbabwe
Edited by Jacques, Nov 7 2017, 08:11 PM.