The Boko Haram insurgency continues
to expand in size and tactics, kidnapping villagers and forcing them to fight.
But what may appear to be mayhem in
northeastern Nigeria, is actually a strategy to wrest territory from the Nigerian
government by isolating the northern seat of power.
Kidnapping is becoming more common
as Boko Haram militants storm villages, taking men, women and children. Last
week, nearly 100 victims were reportedly rescued from insurgents, but no one
knows how many are still being held.
The victims are often forced to join
Boko Haram, blurring the line between the attackers and those they attack.
“These young people out there in the
forest [are]without hope now,” said James Wuye, a pastor who counsels kidnap
victims in northern Nigeria. “Their only hope is to die. We should save them. I
think we should pity everybody on each side. This violence is affecting both
the perceived victim and the aggressors.”
Kidnap victims are strengthening
Boko Haram by growing their army, says Yan St. Pierre, the CEO of the
Berlin-based security consulting firm MOSECON.
Where once the group was just trying
to survive, he says it is now trying to take over territories.
“Boko Haram is now planning
strategically long-term,” St. Pierre said. “It’s not about replenishing forces.
It’s about acquiring more personnel.”
Boko Haram has killed thousands of
people this year alone in a growing, five-year-old insurgency. The group —
which says it wants to enforce a harsh version of Islamic law — is constantly
morphing, and is increasingly well-armed and well-funded.
St. Pierre says the insurgents are
using tactics pioneered by Joseph Kony in Uganda and Charles Taylor in Sierra
Leone to gain loyalty from victims. He says kidnap victims, including children,
are sometimes forced to kill people they know or love.
“By making them kill their own
parents or their own family it makes them be in a position where they can’t go
back,” he said. “Psychologically they are absolutely broken. They killed their
parents. They literally murdered what brought them to life. In that
sense, their loyalty becomes to the only family that they have now, which is
the army or the terrorist group that kidnapped them.”
He says Boko Haram also kidnaps
girls and women, including the more than 200 schoolgirls abducted four months
ago, to use as household help, sex slaves and most recently, bombers.
Last month, at least nine people
were killed in four attacks by female suicide bombers. Two other girls were
arrested, one was a 10 year old strapped with a bomb.
“They’re taking these little girls
now and using them as weapons,” St. Pierre said. “So it’s a double use by
kidnapping girls.”
In Borno and Adamawa states, two of
the three Nigerian states that have been under emergency rule for more than a
year, locals report that Boko Haram has taken over villages and towns, killing
anyone who objects.
Analysts say the group’s aim appears
to be to create a circle of power around the Borno State government in the city
of Maiduguri, with the goal of taking the state capital.
Nigeria previously said it has not,
and will not, allow Boko Haram to rule any parts of Nigeria.
“The Nigerian military will not
concede any portion of this country to terrorists or any such group,” said
Major General Chris Olukolade, a defense spokesman.
However, a Boko Haram “takeover” may
not be what it sounds like. If villagers are terrified into pledging loyalty to
Boko Haram, the group can essentially control the area without hanging flags or
building walls.
(VOA)
Nigeria’s Boko Haram Forces Victims To Fight, Kill
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Tuesday, August 19, 2014
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