Countries hit by Boko Haram violence were warned on
Wednesday not to make premature claims of victory, despite the Islamist group
being pegged back by a sustained military counter-insurgency. “Though the
military response to Boko Haram has become more cogent, the Lake Chad states
should not too quickly proclaim ‘mission accomplished’,” the International
Crisis Group said. “Even if they are made to abandon all territorial
pretensions in Nigeria’s northeast and the Lake Chad area, or are.....
Closer ties beyond military support were vital to address key
drivers of the conflict, as well as its effects, to prevent sustained support
for the Islamists and similar, future threats. These include addressing the
humanitarian situation for the more than 2.8 million people made homeless by
the violence since 2009, and re-establishing the rule of law and governance in
the region. Also key was treatment of detained Boko Haram suspects and even
more moderate fighters willing to be rehabilitated, the ICG wrote in a briefing
paper, “Boko Haram on the back foot?”
“How governments treat and distinguish
Boko Haram ideologues from those who joined from other motives will be vital,”
the report said. “Dealing appropriately with ex-members is the first step to
lessen recruitment.” Nigeria’s military on Tuesday said dozens of Boko Haram
fighters were now at a rehabilitation camp in an undisclosed location and
undergoing a “deradicalisation” programme. – ‘Difficult to eradicate’ –
President Muhammadu Buhari, who has made defeating Boko Haram a priority since
taking power last year, in December declared that the Islamic State group
affiliate was “technically” defeated. Armed service chiefs have in recent days
also been talking up operations in Boko Haram’s Sambisa Forest stronghold,
indicating a final push was under way. But the rebels have still been able to
deploy suicide bombers in northeast Nigeria, and particularly northern
Cameroon, even if attacks have decreased in Chad and Niger. The ICG recommended
winding down the use of civilian militia forces who have helped the military
maintain security but also been accused of abuses against civilians. A failure
to do so could increase the risk of local, communal violence, it warned,
adding:
“Many could become tools for local politicians to misuse.” Boko Haram,
whose push for a hardline Islamic state in northeast Nigeria has left more than
20,000 people dead since 2009, has come to resemble a marauding criminal gang
in recent months. The ICG, however, cautioned that its reduced capacity to
operate beyond hit-and-run raids for resources should not be under-estimated.
“Much like other jihadist groups, such as Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb
(AQIM), it may become less a guerrilla force attached to a specific territory
and more a terror group with a longer reach,” the report added.
“Even if it may
be on its back foot, Boko Haram is likely to be difficult to eradicate, because
it originates from Nigeria’s deep structural challenges.” These include deep-seated
corruption and poor governance, as well as perceived regional inequalities,
abject poverty and lack of opportunity that Boko Haram was able to exploit for
support. A failure to tackle these, combined with uncertainty and weakness in
neighbouring countries, could prolong Boko Haram’s existence in a different
form or even create a new security threat, the ICG added.
souurce Vanguard
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