Defense and Security

Terrorism and Counterterrorism

  • Nigeria
    Darkness in Northern Nigeria
    There are signs that as the Nigerian army and the police continue to fail to meet the security needs of the Nigerian people, they will turn toward repression. In November, Chief of Army Staff Tukur Buratai called on all troops to put themselves in a “war mode.” An internal army communication obtained by the media exhorted Nigerian soldiers to treat all individuals in the region where Boko Haram is active as suspected jihadis until they are “properly identified.” The door is opening to yet more human rights abuses by the security services. Fears that the Buhari government may revive shelved legislation that would seek greater control over social media—including the death penalty for spreading “fake news,” as defined by the government—are also surfacing. Meanwhile, the Coalition of Northern Groups (CNG), a civil society organization that focuses on the welfare of northern Nigerians, is calling on local communities to defend themselves against Boko Haram and “bandits” because the Buhari government is failing to protect them. Last week, before the resolution of the kidnapping of hundreds of schoolboys at Kankara, CNG’s national coordinator said “northern Nigeria has been abandoned at the mercy of various insurgents, bandits, kidnappers, armed robbers, rapists, and an assortment of hardened criminals,” with a “huge vacuum in the political will and capacity of government to challenge” such violent actors. Around the country, numerous state governors are organizing and supporting more-or-less informal militias, ostensibly in support of the army and the police. In the current climate, such groups are likely now acting independently more often than in conjunction with security forces. Some evidence suggests that security service abuses contribute to the alienation of the population from the government, helping drive jihadi recruitment. With the growth of militias, the Nigerian state is losing an attribute of sovereignty: a monopoly on the legal use of violence. The government is also failing to fulfill its obligation to provide security for its people.
  • Nigeria
    Nigeria Security Tracker Weekly Update: December 12–18
    Below is a visualization and description of some of the most significant incidents of political violence in Nigeria from December 12 to December 18, 2020. This update also represents violence related to Boko Haram in Cameroon, Chad, and Niger. These incidents are included in the Nigeria Security Tracker.   December 12: Nigerian troops killed three bandits in Katsina-Ala, Benue. December 12: Twenty Boko Haram militants and one soldier were killed during a clash in Askira/Uba, Borno. December 12: Kidnappers abducted one and killed one soldier and one other in Ibadan, Oyo. December 12: Boko Haram killed thirty refugees in Diffa, Niger. December 13: Three escaped prisoners were killed after a prison break in Calabar, Cross River. December 13–December 14: Kidnappers abducted twenty-two in Rafi, Niger State. December 15: Bandits killed two and kidnapped one in Oshimili South, Delta. December 15: Suspected Fulani herdsmen killed three in Makurdi, Benue. December 15: Following a police killing of a commercial motorcyclist on December 15, protestors burnt down a number of police stations in Aguata, Anambra; during the violence, one police officer and one civilian were killed. December 16: Nigerian troops killed five Boko Haram militants in Ngala, Borno. December 16: Nigerian troops killed two bandits in Katsina-Ala, Benue. December 17: Nigerian troops killed four Boko Haram militants in Kukawa, Borno. December 17: Bandits killed seven in Zangon-Kataf, Kaduna. December 17: Amotekun officers killed two civilians in Ibadan, Oyo. December 17: Kidnappers abducted five in Kaura-Namode, Zamfara. December 18: Gunmen killed eight during an attack on the Zamfara Emir's convoy in Funtua, Katsina. December 18: Boko Haram killed five and abducted thirty-five travelers during a highway attack in Konduga, Borno. December 18: A suspected Boko Haram suicide bomber killed herself and three others in Konduga, Borno.
  • Local and Traditional Leadership
    Release of Nigerian School Boys: Questions and Hypotheses
    The freeing of perhaps 344 boys kidnapped from a boarding school at Kankara in Katsina state is unalloyed good news. However, the foiled attempt to kidnap another eighty school children, at Dandume in the same state a few days later on December 19, highlights the iniquitousness of criminal gang activity. As for the now-freed Kankara victims, many questions remain. Just how many were kidnapped, how many escaped, how many were released, and how many (if any) are still in captivity is unclear. The perpetrators of the Kankara crime appear to have been three criminal, locally based gangs known to the state government of Katsina. The state government negotiated their release. The governor's denial of having paid ransom is hardly credible, given usual Nigerian practice. Media is saying credibly that the gangs and the state government have a longstanding relationship, with the latter paying the former protection money. Such "peace agreements" frequently go sour. That might be the background to this kidnapping—gang pressure on the state government.  Alternatively, the kidnapping could have been "commissioned" by Boko Haram, perhaps the reasoning behind Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau's claim of responsibility. Media reports that the three gangs have long been associated with Boko Haram, to which it sells stolen weapons and other illicit material. However, the gangs retained control of the kidnapped boys, rather than turning them over immediately to Boko Haram, making possible bargaining. At Dandume, the perpetrators were also involved in cattle rustling. According to the media, quick action by the police and a local militia freed the children and recovered the cattle from a local hideout. Both episodes highlight the role of criminal gangs in the north and their interrelationship with governments, jihadi groups, and local militias. "Ungoverned spaces" are controlled by a kaleidoscope of elements ranging from the purely criminal to jihadi. What about the people? The popular support or acquiescence enjoyed by criminal gangs and jihadi groups is hard to judge. But exploited and marginalized people everywhere have turned to criminal gangs and religion since the days of Robin Hood and "evil" King John.
  • Nigeria
    Nigeria Security Tracker Weekly Update: December 5–11
    Below is a visualization and description of some of the most significant incidents of political violence in Nigeria from December 5 to December 11, 2020. This update also represents violence related to Boko Haram in Cameroon, Chad, and Niger. These incidents are included in the Nigeria Security Tracker.   December 5: Airstrikes killed "several" (estimated at ten) bandits in Birnin-Gwari, Kaduna. December 5: Bandits killed four people in Talata-Mafara, Zamfara. December 6: Nigerian troops killed three bandits in Makurdi, Benue. December 6: Nigerian troops killed four Boko Haram militants in Magumeri, Borno. December 7: Kidnappers killed two and abducted two in Karim-Lamido, Taraba. December 7: Kidnappers abducted three teachers in Uvwie, Delta. December 7: Nigerian troops killed two Boko Haram militants in Bama, Borno. December 7: The Islamic State in West Africa (ISWA) killed ten Nigerian soldiers and took one hostage in Damboa, Borno. November 23–December 7: Cult clashes resulted in twenty deaths in Ijebu-Ode, Ogun. December 8: Gunmen killed two in Oredo, Edo. December 8: Nigerian troops killed seven Boko Haram militants in Gwoza, Borno. December 8: Bandits killed sixteen in Dambatta, Kano; police officers claim the deaths were due to a road accident. December 8: A cult clash resulted in two deaths in Warri South, Delta. December 9: Kidnappers abducted a Taraba lawmaker in Jalingo, Taraba. December 9: A land dispute led to five deaths in Isoko South, Delta. December 9: Nigerian troops killed two bandits in Nasarawa, Nassarawa. December 9: Bandits kidnapped twenty-five in Sabuwa, Katsina. December 9: Kidnappers abducted two Indian foreign nationals in Ibadan, Oyo. December 9: ISWA abducted two aid workers in Konduga, Borno. December 10: Police officers killed two civilians in Obio/Akpor, Rivers. December 10: Kidnappers abducted five in Rafi, Niger State. December 11: Gunmen killed one police officer in Uvwie, Delta. December 11: The Nigerian Air Force killed "several" (estimated at ten) Boko Haram militants in Gwoza, Borno. December 11: Herdsmen killed four in Makurdi, Benue. December 11: Bandits may have killed three people and kidnapped up to six hundred students at a school in Kankara, Katsina. December 11: Communal violence resulted in two deaths in Akure, Ondo.
  • Mali
    United Kingdom Sends Troops to Mali
    Boris Johnson’s government is deploying three hundred British troops to the UN peacekeeping force MINUSMA in Mali. They will join some fourteen thousand other troops from fifty-six countries. The British troops will be deployed to Gao, in eastern Mali. According to their commander, General Nick Borton, they will be involved with reconnaissance in a radius of about ten miles around Gao. British deployment to Mali is unusual. The British government has usually left military involvement to the French in the latter's former colonies, including Mali. The Johnson government's motivation behind the deployment is unclear. Gen. Borton says the aim is to "support the political process," but that British forces will return fire if attacked. Yet what "political process" is underway is obscure, other than an ongoing rehash of sterile approaches that reflect a lack of will for fundamental change on the part of Mali's government and the militant jihadi goals of the insurgents. British media notes that the Johnson government sees the United Kingdom as a "force for good," and that belief may be some of the context. The British deployment is with UN forces, rather than those of the European Union which have been led by France. Some aspects of the decision to deploy were possibly influenced by the fact that negotiations for the United Kingdom's withdrawal from the European Union have entered their final days. The British deployment decision is yet another sign of growing Western European awareness of the jihadi threat in West Africa. Gen. Borton says that the deployment is a consequence of "a combination of violent conflict and unprecedented migration." The general is likely referring to the growing numbers of internally displaced persons in Mali and elsewhere in the Sahel. But there remains at least some anxiety in Western Europe about a wave of refugees from Africa. West Africa is, indeed, "the near abroad" of Western Europe and hence a region of growing concern and involvement, of which the British deployment is a manifestation.
  • Homeland Security
    Homeland Security Emerging Threats: Domestic Terrorism and White Supremacy
    Play
    Panelists discuss the history of emerging threats facing U.S. homeland security, particularly the rise of domestic terrorism and white supremacist extremism, and the framework that is necessary to address these issues.
  • Peacekeeping
    EU Task Force Takuba in Mali
    As a jihadi insurgency spreads across the Sahel, EU countries are responding to France's call for increased troop deployments in the region. A Franco-Estonian elite unit, styled Task Force Takuba, has arrived in northern Mali and is based near the city of Gao. Czech and Swedish forces are due to arrive soon. From media reports, the deployments go beyond the training and support of indigenous military. The contributing elements are from each country's elite special forces units, and they will also work with the regular French troops deployed since 2013 as part of Operation Barkhane. Belgium, Denmark, the Netherlands, Norway, and Greece have made commitments to send special forces to Mali, as has Italy, whose troops are expected soon. Parliamentary approval for deployment is usually required by each contributing country. The Czech parliament gave its assent to troop deployments in October. In a likely unrelated development, the United States has upped the billet of the U.S. Army Africa commander—which will merge with U.S. Army Europe—from a two-star to a four-star general. The change reflects the new emphasis that the U.S. Department of Defense is placing on the Sahel. As the French say, the Sahel is the "near abroad" of Europe and the European Union. The deployment of troops from EU countries in multinational units could be a harbinger of closer EU defense cooperation. An Estonian soldier, part of Task Force Takuba, is quoted in the media as saying that "so far there is no problem of interoperability" with the French military. Jihadi terrorism and insurrection have deep societal roots in the western Sahel that cannot be addressed by increased use of military force. However, security is deteriorating, and genuine reform—presuming political will for it exists among indigenous elites—requires security. Hence, it is hard to see a way forward that does not rely on increased military activity. Nevertheless, the expanded writ of Task Force Takuba makes it inevitable that there will be casualties. In that eventuality, it remains to be seen whether European and EU resolve will be maintained.
  • Nigeria
    Nigeria Security Tracker Weekly Update: November 28-December 4
    Below is a visualization and description of some of the most significant incidents of political violence in Nigeria from November 28 to December 4, 2020. This update also represents violence related to Boko Haram in Cameroon, Chad, and Niger. These incidents are included in the Nigeria Security Tracker.   November 28: Boko Haram killed 110 people in Jere, Borno.   November 28: Gunmen killed two in Jos South, Plateau.  November 29: Unknown attackers killed eight in Jema'a, Kaduna. November 29: Cultists killed three in Ughelli North, Delta. November 29: Cultists killed three in Ezza North and one in Ezza South in Ebonyi.   November 29: Gunmen killed four in Wukari and two in Jalingo in Taraba.  November 29: Troops killed one bandit while the bandits killed two people in Chikun, Kaduna.  November 30: Pirates killed one and kidnapped two in Okrika, Rivers.  November 30: Troops killed one bandit in Igabi, Kaduna.  November 30: Bandits killed seven farmers and abducted thirty in Sabuwa, Katsina.  November 30: Bandits killed one traditional ruler and kidnapped eight in Talata-Mafara, Zamfara.  November 30: Airstrikes killed "several" (estimated at ten) Boko Haram militants in Konduga, Borno.  November 30: ISWA abducted one aid worker and two local officials in Kaga, Borno.  November 30: Bandits killed four at a market in Mashegu, Niger State; the villagers killed one bandit in retaliation.   December 1: Suspected Fulani militias killed three and kidnapped two in Jos South, Plateau.  December 1: Airstrikes killed "several" (estimated at ten) Boko Haram militants in Gwoza, Borno.  December 2: The assistant commissioner of police was killed in Calabar, Cross River.  December 3: Electoral violence resulted in two deaths in Bakura, Zamfara.  December 3: A land dispute resulted in two deaths in Akure North, Ondo.  December 3: Kidnappers killed three and abducted ten in Uhunmwonde, Edo; vigilantes killed one of the kidnappers.  December 3: A cult clash resulted in five deaths in Alimosho, Lagos. December 3: Boko Haram killed four and kidnapped two in northern Cameroon.  December 3: Villagers kidnapped four police officers and three vigilantes in Ijebu North, Ogun.  December 4: Police officers killed two bandits in Tambuwal, Sokoto.  December 4: Robbers killed four at a market in Oredo, Edo.
  • Local and Traditional Leadership
    Nigeria: Atrocity in the Northeast
    In response to the latest atrocity—the November 28 killing of civilians working in rice fields in villages in the Jere local government area, which is close to the Borno State capital of Maiduguri—Borno State Governor Babagana Umara Zulum appears to be looking for Borno State and local entities to restore security. In a public statement, he did call on the federal government to recruit more troops, but his emphasis appears to have been on growing the Civilian Joint Task Force and civil defense forces. These are state and local forces, rather than federal, often with little coordination with the Nigerian army. In the northeast, as federal security provision is breaking down, it is being replaced by state and local entities, as the governor signaled. This trend, to be seen elsewhere in Nigeria, does not bode well for national unity, which has been dependent on the Nigerian army. (Gov. Zulum is a member of President Muhammadu Buhari's political party; the latter issued a statement condemning the atrocity, but despite domestic political pressure, he has thus far has not advanced a new security initiative in response to escalating attacks on civilians.) With some eight hundred casualties in 2020, the Nigerian army has withdrawn into fortified bases, thereby reducing their deaths but ceding control of the countryside to violent armed groups—mostly jihadi, but also criminal outfits. Boko Haram warlord Abubakar Shekau claims responsibility for the killing of seventy-eight rice farmers. (Estimates of the exact number of those killed range up to 110 or even more.) Shekau, according to African media, states that the killing was revenge for local people turning over a Boko Haram operative to the Nigerian army. Boko Haram perpetrators resorted to a familiar form of terror: deliberate throat-slitting. The numbers killed guaranteed national and international media attention, perhaps Shekau’s goal. As in other atrocities, local factors unknown to the Borno State government—much less to the federal government and international media—played a role in the killing.
  • Nigeria
    Nigeria Security Tracker Weekly Update: November 21-27
    Below is a visualization and description of some of the most significant incidents of political violence in Nigeria from November 21 to November 27, 2020. This update also represents violence related to Boko Haram in Cameroon, Chad, and Niger. These incidents are included in the Nigeria Security Tracker.   (Last week, November 20: Bandits killed five and kidnapped forty at a mosque in Maru, Zamfara.) November 21: Islamic State in West Africa (ISWA) militants killed seven soldiers and one militia member in Gubio, Borno.  November 21: Nigerian troops killed one Boko Haram militant in Bama, Borno.   November 21: Nigerian troops killed approximately seven bandits in Shinkafi, Zamfara.  November 21: Nigerian troops killed six bandits in Maru, Zamfara.  November 22: Nigerian troops killed one bandit in Zurmi, Zamfara.  November 22: Gunmen killed two vigilantes in Udu, Delta.  November 22: Gunmen killed one and kidnapped two in Kokona, Nassarawa.  November 22: Airstrikes killed "several" (estimated at ten) ISWA militants in Kukawa, Borno.  November 23: Bandits killed two in Igabi, Kaduna. November 23: Airstrikes killed sixty-seven bandits in Faskari, Katsina. November 23: Airstrikes killed fifteen bandits in the Ajjah Forest in Zamfara. November 24: Suspected herdsmen kidnapped three in Ajaokuta, Kogi.  November 24: Airstrikes killed "dozens" (estimated at twenty-four) of ISWA militants in Kukawa, Borno.  November 24: Nigerian troops killed two ISWA militants in Gwoza, Borno. November 25: Boko Haram killed three and kidnapped one in Koza, Cameroon.  November 26: Nigerian troops killed three bandits in Katsina-Ala, Benue. November 27: Kidnappers killed one police officer and kidnapped one Chinese engineer in Ado-Ekiti, Ekiti.  November 27: Airstrikes killed "several" (estimated at ten) Boko Haram militants in Marte, Borno.  November 27: Nigerian troops killed two Boko Haram militants in Ngala LGA, two Boko Haram militants in Gwoza LGA, and one Boko Haram militant in Damboa LGA in Borno. 
  • Nigeria
    Nigeria Security Tracker Weekly Update: November 14-20
    Below is a visualization and description of some of the most significant incidents of political violence in Nigeria from November 14 to November 20, 2020. This update also represents violence related to Boko Haram in Cameroon, Chad, and Niger. These incidents are included in the Nigeria Security Tracker.   November 14: Kidnappers abducted three in Zaria, Kaduna. November 14: Police officers killed two civilians in Kano, Kano. November 14: A cult clash resulted in seven deaths in Ughelli, Delta. November 14: The Nigerian Air Force killed "several" (estimated at ten) Boko Haram militants in Gwoza, Borno. November 14: Kidnappers abducted nine in Ose, Ondo. November 15: Bandits killed two and abducted nine in Kachia, Kaduna. November 15: Kidnappers abducted two and killed one in Kajuru, Kaduna. November 15: Troops killed three bandits in Malumfashi, Katsina. November 15–16: Communal violence resulted in two deaths in Bekwarra, Cross River. November 16: Bandits killed eleven in Igabi, Kaduna. November 16: Kidnappers abducted five tax officials in Vandeikya, Benue. November 17: Bandits killed two in Zangon Kataf, Kaduna. November 17: Bandits killed two and kidnapped "some" (estimated at five) in Giwa, Kaduna. November 17: Gunmen killed three vigilantes in Chikun, Kaduna. November 17: The military killed "several" (estimated at ten) bandits in Kagarko, Kaduna. November 17: Kidnappers abducted eight in Esan South-East, Edo. November 18: Bandits killed one police officer and kidnapped fourteen in Mariga, Niger State. November 18: Airstrikes killed seventeen bandits in Danmusa, Katsina. November 18: Boko Haram allegedly shot down a UN helicopter, killing five in Bama, Borno; the Nigerian Air Force denies this claim. November 19: A clash between customs officials and smugglers resulted in the deaths of one soldier, one customs officer, and one civilian in Ibarapa Central, Oyo. November 20: Kidnappers abducted fourteen in Oredo, Edo. November 20: Gunmen killed one and kidnapped one in Igabi, Kaduna. November 20: A police officer accidentally shot and killed another police officer while trying to quell a protest in Ado-Ekiti, Ekiti.
  • Mozambique
    The Military-First Approach in Northern Mozambique is Bound to Fail
    Nolan Quinn is a research associate for the Council on Foreign Relations’ Africa Program. On October 14, the Islamist insurgency focused in northern Mozambique spilled over into Tanzania, with an estimated three hundred militants carrying out an attack on Kitaya village in the region of Mtwara. Since then, Ansar al-Sunna (ASWJ)—the Mozambican jihadi group with apparent links to the self-proclaimed Islamic State (IS)—has claimed at least three more attacks in Mtwara. This comes despite Tanzania sending troops to the region earlier this year to tighten border security and its military’s security operations in areas near the Mozambican border. The widening scope of ASWJ’s attacks is indicative of the shortcomings of the current approach to combating the group. The response to the Islamist insurgency has, thus far, been primarily military in focus. In September 2019, the Wagner Group—a private military contractor with links to the Kremlin—was deployed to Cabo Delgado, Mozambique’s worst-afflicted province and site of the largest private investment in Africa. By November the same year, the mercenaries were evacuated after sustaining losses; another security contractor, the South African Dyck Advisory Group (DAG), remains in Cabo Delgado but has been unable to subdue the insurgency. An (unlikely) intervention by South African government forces has been considered, and Zimbabwe’s ruling party has argued the Southern African Development Community should invoke its mutual defense pact and enter the conflict. The European Union, meanwhile, agreed last month to provide training as well as logistical and medical support to Mozambican forces. The military response has been hampered by its unprofessionalism. Tensions between Tanzanian and Mozambican forces were already high before the former allegedly fired rockets into the latter’s territory, injuring civilians. Mozambican forces were implicated in a horrific extrajudicial killing last year and have been credibly accused of various other abuses. DAG helicopters have, on multiple occasions, killed Mozambican civilians in counterinsurgency operations. Amid the climate of insecurity, Mozambique’s government has begun arming militia groups, which have publicly tortured and beheaded suspected insurgents. Government forces and militia groups have accidentally attacked one another several times, highlighting a lack of coordination. Concerted efforts to improve governance and economic opportunity in Cabo Delgado have been largely absent from any existing counterinsurgency strategy. Instead, in a peripheral region blighted by persistent poverty and inequality [PDF], government officials have prioritized the interests of multinational energy companies, large-scale ruby miners, and heroin smugglers [PDF] at the expense of local workers—all while enriching themselves [PDF] through corrupt practices. In Tanzania, President John Magufuli has shown slightly more concern for Mtwara’s economic fortunes by promising government purchases of cashews, a local staple. This, however, has not stopped residents of the region—an opposition stronghold—from crossing into Cabo Delgado to join the insurgency. Government corruption and economic stagnation, coupled with security forces’ penchant for human rights violations, help strengthen ASWJ. While the Islamist group is notorious for gruesome killings, it also employs tactics to win local support. The group has warned civilians to flee before attacks, distributed food in areas under its control, and offered loans to potential recruits. This “hearts and minds” approach bears the imprint of IS, which advocated a similar tactical shift in the Lake Chad Basin, where the Islamic State in West Africa (ISWA) began providing services and split from Boko Haram due to the latter’s more indiscriminate targeting of civilians. It appears that ASWJ, which has been formally aligned with IS since June 2019, has increased cooperation [PDF] with foreign jihadis. By implementing some of their operational practices, ASWJ is finding success in undermining the Mozambican government’s already tenuous claims to legitimacy. A first step in improving the counterinsurgency effort should be to formalize militia groups’ participation. A major impediment to the military response has been the makeup of troops deployed to Cabo Delgado: most soldiers do not speak the local languages and, being underpaid with little personal attachment to the area, often retreat when attacked. Both the military and militia groups need training in human rights—from the European Union or a regional body—and a clear indication that violations will be punished. To date, Mozambique’s government has not taken any steps to investigate abuses. This makes it difficult for government forces to win local cooperation in fighting ASWJ. Better regional partnerships—especially with the Tanzanian government, with whom joint police operations are set to begin—are needed to push back on ASWJ’s expansion, particularly its growing maritime prowess. A military-first approach cannot cure a failing state. The government and its partners should equally focus on restoring—or, in some areas, establishing for the first time—provision of basic services. Encouragingly, after years of delay, the government appears to have recognized the need for a development strategy. As renowned Mozambique scholar Joseph Hanlon recently documented [PDF], President Filipe Nyusi has put one of his most trusted, effective officials in charge of development agencies—with a remit focused in the country’s north—controlling more than $2.8 billion. The World Bank, meanwhile, has set aside $700 million for initiatives “to address the underlying causes of fragility and conflict.” Hanlon also points to a cash transfer program, starting in Cabo Delgado but later scaling up to the entire country, as a plausible way to share resource wealth. These measures are not preordained for success: hollow institutions and rampant corruption are at the core of Mozambique’s problems and will complicate the rollout of economic stimulus programs. Building a more effective state will amplify military and economic approaches to counterinsurgency and improve the chances of achieving lasting peace. The process of doing so will be long and arduous. But after years of neglecting—even actively harming—many of its citizens, Mozambique’s government has no alternative.
  • Nigeria
    Financing Boko Haram
    There has long been speculation about how Boko Haram and other terrorist organizations are funded. Some funding clearly comes [PDF] from criminal activity, with kidnapping particularly lucrative, and from bank robberies. Presumably, protection rackets also play a role. At some times and in some places, Boko Haram has been able to impose "taxes" on the local population. Boko Haram has also been involved in trading, especially in the Lake Chad Basin. Weapons—a major expense—appear often to come from government armories, sometimes because "the back gate was left unlocked." In southern, predominantly Christian Nigeria, it is often assumed that northern "big men" provide funding for Boko Haram. Most of this is speculation. It also appears likely that Boko Haram's brand of terrorism is cheap; the organization does not require the levels of funding characteristic of terrorist organizations operating in the Middle East or Europe. Significant, therefore, that the Federal Court of Appeals in the United Arab Emirates, which sits in Abu Dhabi, has sentenced to jail six Nigerians for transferring $782,000 from Dubai to Boko Haram in Nigeria. Two were sentenced to life imprisonment, four to ten years—all for violation of UAE anti-terrorism laws. Two "Boko Haram agents" in Nigeria received the funds, according to media based on court proceedings. One was a "Nigerian government official" who also funneled "government money" to Boko Haram, according to Nigerian media. The defendants did not deny that they transferred to money but claimed that doing so was not illegal. Media accounts are sketchy and incomplete. The defendants could have maintained that the recipients were not Boko Haram. Claims that the UAE court was corrupt are absent from media reporting. The sentences were relatively light. Those sentenced to life imprisonment could have received the death penalty. The amount of money transferred seems large, but no indication of the source of the money is given. Claims that Nigerian government officials were conniving with Boko Haram are common and should not be taken at face value. On the other hand, after more than a decade and often murderous splits, Boko Haram is still far from defeated, implying that it still enjoys support.
  • Nigeria
    Nigeria Security Tracker Weekly Update: November 7-13
    Below is a visualization and description of some of the most significant incidents of political violence in Nigeria from November 7 to November 13, 2020. This update also represents violence related to Boko Haram in Cameroon, Chad, and Niger. These incidents are included in the Nigeria Security Tracker.   November 7: Airstrikes killed "several" (estimated at ten) bandits in Kuzo, Kaduna (Local Government Area unknown). November 7: Kidnappers abducted six in Chikun, Kaduna. November 8: Boko Haram militants attacked Gwoza, Borno but were repelled by Nigerian troops who killed one would-be Boko Haram suicide bomber. November 8: Airstrikes killed "several" (estimated at ten) ISWA militants in Abadam, Borno. November 8: Troops killed five Boko Haram militants in Gujba, Yobe. November 8: Troops killed two bandits in Tsafe, Zamfara. November 8: Bandits killed three and kidnapped thirteen in Sabuwa, Katsina. November 9: Gunmen killed two police officers and one other in Igueben, Edo. November 10: Airstrikes killed "several" (estimated at ten) Boko Haram militants in Gwoza, Borno. November 11: Police officers killed four bandits in Mashegu, Niger State. November 11: Bandits killed one and abducted approximately three in Anka, Zamfara. November 11: Troops killed two Boko Haram militants in Ladantar, Borno (LGA unknown). November 12: Cultists killed two in Ikpoba-Okha LGA and two in Egor LGA in Edo. November 12: Troops killed "several" bandits in Birnin-Gwari, Kaduna. November 13: Cultists killed seven in Oredo LGA and one assistant commissioner of police in Ikpoba-Okha LGA in Edo. November 13: Troops killed one bandit in Faskari, Katsina.
  • Nigeria
    Nigeria Security Tracker Weekly Update: October 31-November 6
    Below is a visualization and description of some of the most significant incidents of political violence in Nigeria from October 31 to November 6, 2020. This update also represents violence related to Boko Haram in Cameroon, Chad, and Niger. These incidents are included in the Nigeria Security Tracker.   October 31: U.S. forces killed six suspected bandits during a rescue mission for a kidnapped American citizen around Illela, Sokoto. October 31: Police officers killed a journalist in custody in Agege, Lagos. November 1: Boko Haram killed twelve and kidnapped nine in Chibok, Borno. November 1: Kidnappers abducted four in Calabar South, Cross River. November 2: A Boko Haram landmine killed nine Nigerian soldiers in Abadam, Borno. November 2: The Civilian Joint Task Force killed "scores" (estimated at twenty) of Boko Haram militants in Nganzai, Borno. November 3: Gunmen killed one and kidnapped one in Igabi, Kaduna. November 4: One bandit and two civilians were killed during a clash in Kaura-Namoda, Zamfara. November 5: Gunmen killed one Nigeria Security and Civil Defense Corps officer and one vigilante, and kidnapped two students in Yola, Adamawa. November 5: Nigerian troops killed five bandits and lost one soldier in Faskari, Katsina. November 5: Gunmen abducted sixteen in Owo, Ondo.