Boko Haram
terrorists have become a threat beyond Nigeria's borders. The governments of
the affected states say they have joined forces to combat the extremist group,
but their cooperation leaves a lot to be desired.
Deutsche Welle, 30 Dec 2014
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| In an image taken from a Boko Haram video, the leader of the group Boko Haram is flanked by masked gunmen holding flags. Photo: (AP Photo) |
"There
is total panic" is how Danjuma Hamina from Achigachia describes what is
happening in her home town in northern Cameroon. Fighters from the terrorist
group Boko Haram had taken control of the town, she said, and "even
hoisted their flag." Together with dozens of others, Hamina boarded a
train and fled to Cameroon's capital Yaounde.
Boko Haram
members have been raiding villages near the border between northern Cameroon
and Nigeria for several months. But this time things were different, the
eyewitness told DW. "We have not seen an attack like this since the whole
Boko Haram thing started," she exclaimed.
According
to the Cameroonian military, more than 1,000 terrorists have attacked several
places in the border area in the past few days. They killed numerous civilians
and soldiers. After heavy fighting on Sunday (29.12.2014), they briefly seized
a military base in Achigachia.
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| Chad's military is considered to be strong, but the neighboring countries distrust Chad's government |
Only after
Cameroon launched its first-ever air strikes against the terrorist group, did
the military succeed in retaking the base.
It is still
unclear how many people died in the attacks, the Cameroonian military said. But
what has become abundantly clear by now is that Boko Haram not only poses a
threat to northern Nigeria, but to the neighboring states as well.
The
Islamists have been carrying out bloody attacks for five years, most of them in
the Nigerian states of Borno, Yobe and Adamawa. They even control large swathes
of the country's northeast, where they have proclaimed the establishment of a
caliphate in line with their radical Islamist ideology. They have killed
several thousand people and driven between 700,000 and 1.5 million from their
homes.
Joint
declaration of war, but no consequences
In the past
months Boko Haram has been expanding its activities into neighboring Cameroon,
Chad and Niger. For some time now, experts say, the extremists have maintained
bases on both sides of various borders as havens to which they can retreat if
attacked. The terrorists are recruiting fighters in the neighboring countries
as well. Several high-ranking leaders of the group reportedly come from Chad
and Niger.
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| Nigeria's neighbors lie in a poor and unstable region |
While the
extremists have again proven that they are capable of cross-border attacks,
each of the affected countries has by and large been responding to them on its
own.
In May
2014, the heads of state of Nigeria and neighboring Niger, Chad, Cameroon and
Benin had declared a "war" against Boko Haram. At a summit hosted by
French President Francois Hollande, they agreed on measures to tackle the
terrorist threat, including pooling intelligence, joint border surveillance and
an intervention force. But very little has happened since.
Not long
ago Cameroon again declared that it would cooperate more closely with Chad,
Niger and Nigeria, according to Jesper Cullen, a security analyst for the
British consultancy Risk Advisory Group. "But just [now] the Cameroonian
government said one of the problems they're really facing is that the limit of
their military is the border with Nigeria, and as soon as Boko Haram crosses
over, Boko Haram are free to run around pretty much as they want." This
shows that there is no coordination between the two armies, the expert said.
Distrust
between intelligence agencies
Niger's
south has also been massively affected by Boko Haram violence.
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| More than 120,000 people have already fled from Nigeria to the south of Niger |
The
president of Diffa's regional parliament says his region has already accepted
more than 120,000 refugees from northern Nigeria. "More come every
day," Mahirou Malam Ligari said in an interview with DW. The government of
Niger, one of the poorest countries in the world, was doing all it could,
Ligari said. "But we need more help," he stressed.
The wave of
refugees is not only a social challenge. Along with the refugees, Boko Haram
fighters enter the country. Niger's security forces had already arrested
several suspected terrorists, Ligari said. But he warned that the threat of
attacks in the border region remained high.
Although
they have a common enemy, there is distrust among the affected countries.
Nigerian media have repeatedly accused Chad's leaders of supporting Boko Haram.
Cameroon also suspects that the terrorists are receiving help in other
countries. "You have to ask yourself how a movement like this, whose supply
lines have been cut, can continue to cause damage on this scale,"
Cameroonian military spokesman Didier Badjeck told DW. "This means that
behind the scenes strange things are happening with respect to Boko
Haram."
The
security forces and the governments in the region do not accuse each other
openly. But the massive distrust between them also manifests itself in the lack
of cooperation between their intelligence agencies, according to a statement
given by Comfort Ero, Africa director for the International Crisis Group, to
the news agency AP. "None of the sides is willing to share information
with the other," Ero said.




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