Nigerian troops who fled Boko Haram now have them on the run
YOLA, Nigeria (AP) — A year ago,
a dozen Nigerian troops fighting about 200 Boko Haram militants in the
town of Chibok exhausted their ammunition and ran, leaving the road open
for the abduction of nearly 300 girls.
Today,
Nigerian soldiers are rescuing hundreds of kidnapped girls and women
from the last forest stronghold of the Islamic insurgents.
The reason for the unimaginably swift shift in fortunes?
In
the last three months, military forces from neighboring Chad, Niger and
Cameroon have joined the battle. In addition, Nigerian troops are
finally receiving better arms and weapons, as well as hazard pay that
they had not received until this year.
As
a result, Boko Haram's supply lines are being cut off, creating
conditions for the security forces to deliver a potential knockout blow
to the extremists who have created havoc in northeastern Nigeria for
years.
Nigeria's military has
announced that it has recaptured all major towns seized by the
insurgents and that Boko Haram's main fighting force is hemmed into the
Sambisa Forest, where it is being pounded by air raids and attack
helicopters. While the government forces are stronger, Boko Haram is
growing weaker by the day.
Women rescued in recent days
from forest camps said that now it is the insurgents who are running out
of ammunition, along with food and fuel. That could explain why — when
the captives refused to follow fleeing Boko Haram members last week —
the militants did not shoot them. Instead, they stoned the girls and
women, killing several of them.
Last
year, Boko Haram fighters were able to escape across Nigeria's borders
to evade capture. Now, they are blocked by the troops from Chad, Niger
and Cameroon. With Nigeria's permission, Chad and Niger have even sent
their forces inside Nigeria to pursue the extremists.
Routes used
by Boko Haram to transport fuel and ammunition have been reclaimed by
the military. On Sunday, military intelligence officers arrested a man
who allegedly supplied fuel and food to Boko Haram, reported Defense
Ministry spokesman Maj. Gen. Chris Olukolade.
Last
year's toll of people killed by Boko Haram was estimated at 10,000 —
more than in all the previous four years of the insurgency combined. The
group carried out cross-border attacks with impunity, seized a swath of
northeastern Nigeria the size of Belgium and created a wave of 1.5
million refugees fleeing the self-declared Islamic caliphate.
President
Goodluck Jonathan did not take a strong stand until this year — too
late to save him from losing re-election in March as disgusted voters in
Africa's biggest democracy opted instead for Muhammadu Buhari, a former
military dictator.
Jonathan also was slow to act
when the group last year abducted the more than 200 schoolgirls in
Chibok — initially denying it had even happened and losing precious
weeks in the mass kidnapping that sparked worldwide outrage and a
campaign for their freedom under the hashtag of #BringBackOurGirls. It
is still unclear if any of the Chibok girls are among the 700 freed from
Boko Haram in the past week.
Buhari
had crushed another Islamic uprising in the 1980s, and he has vowed "to
rid this nation of terror" after he becomes president on May 29. A
retired major general, he describes himself as a convert to democracy,
and showed it by taking power through the ballot box.
In
the war zone, self-defense civilian groups patrol markets with homemade
weapons, looking out for suicide bombers — but also for strangers
buying large amounts of food, indicating they could be Boko Haram
members or suppliers. While the group still has the ability to carry out
bombings and isolated attacks, it would be difficult for it to surpass
last year's carnage.
Nigeria
and its African partners say they want to eradicate Boko Haram. A more
realistic goal may be to reduce it to what it used to be: a terror group
with no control over territory — still able to launch attacks but not
on as large a scale as before.
Soldiers
on the battlefront around the hills and caves of Gwoza, which Boko
Haram had declared the capital of its caliphate, told The Associated
Press this week that many improvements have led to the turnaround
against the insurgents. Among them:
— Troops this year began receiving the daily hazard pay of 15,000 naira ($75) for the first time.
— Some battle-weary troops who had been on the front lines for two years recently have been allowed to stand down.
—
The forces have received new weapons and ammunition. Previously, there
were reports that troops going into battle had only 30 rounds of
ammunition each, with corrupt commanders diverting resources into their
own pockets.
Since democracy
was restored in Nigeria in 1999, civilian governments have deliberately
kept the armed forces weak to ensure that soldiers could not mount any
more of the coups that kept the West African nation subjected to
military dictatorships for decades. Boko Haram has forced a change in
that strategy.
Africa's
biggest oil producer has bought helicopters, drones, armored personnel
carriers, tanks, rocket launchers and other armaments. This includes
helicopter gunships that are being used in the Sambisa Forest to scatter
the militants and drive them away from their captives, according to
video released Monday by PR Nigeria, an agency that disseminates
government information
"What we never had, we now
have," the government spokesman on the insurgency, Mike Omeri, told the
AP in a recent interview. "We have drones, we have aircraft, we have
APCs, and so on, and we are getting to where we should be to rebuild the
armed forces, returning it to its glory."
Buhari
will be tested on whether he can revive the economy in the northeast,
which has been decimated by the uprising. Hundreds of thousands of
farmers have been driven from their lands, some of the biggest cattle
markets on the continent no longer exist and many investors have
abandoned the region. Rebuilding the hundreds of thousands of structures
razed by Boko Haram will cost many millions of dollars.
The stakes are high for landlocked Chad as well, since many of its trading routes have been closed by the insurgency.
Economic
strife has been one of the root causes for the rise of Boko Haram,
which has exploited the feelings of exclusion among the unemployed and
disaffected men in predominantly Muslim northern Nigeria.
Buhari
also has promised to address corruption, another reason for the group's
growth. Corruption sapped the military of its strength and has deprived
front-line troops of weapons and vehicles. Unless Buhari can root it
out, it will affect the military's capability to prevent the rise of
another group like Boko Haram.
___
Associated Press writer Ibrahim Abdulaziz contributed to this report from Yola, Nigeria.
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