Boko Haram

  • Nigeria
    Nigeria Security Tracker Weekly Update: September 26-October 2
    Below is a visualization and description of some of the most significant incidents of political violence in Nigeria from September 26 to October 2, 2020. This update also represents violence related to Boko Haram in Cameroon, Chad, and Niger. These incidents are included in the Nigeria Security Tracker. September 26: Kidnappers abducted four in Aniocha North, Delta.  September 26: Air strikes killed "several" (estimated at ten) Boko Haram militants in Marte, Borno.  September 27: Bandits killed one and kidnapped seven in Danko Wasagu, Kebbi.  September 27: Cultists killed one at a church in Oruk-Anam, Akwa Ibom.  September 28: Nigerian troops killed two bandits in Kajuru, Kaduna.  September 28: Two herdsmen were killed in Ivo, Ebonyi.  September 28: Boko Haram killed two Cameroonian soldiers in Zeleved, Cameroon.  September 29: ISWA killed ten Nigerian soldiers in Marte, Borno.  September 29: Airstrikes killed "several" (estimated at ten) ISWA militants in Marte, Borno.  September 30: Suspected Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) members killed one police officer in Oyigbo, Rivers.  October 1: Military air strikes killed "several" (estimated at ten) Boko Haram militants in Ngala, Borno.  October 2: Nigerian police officers killed six armed robbers in Uyo, Akwa Ibom. 
  • Nigeria
    Nigeria Security Tracker Weekly Update: September 19-25
    Below is a visualization and description of some of the most significant incidents of political violence in Nigeria from September 19 to September 25, 2020. This update also represents violence related to Boko Haram in Cameroon, Chad, and Niger. These incidents are included in the Nigeria Security Tracker.     September 19: Bandits kidnapped forty-two people in Maru, Zamfara.  September 19: Police officers killed two robbers in Suleja, Niger state.  September 19: Communal violence led to four deaths in Awka South, Anambra.  September 20: Nigerian soldiers killed three civilians in Andoni, Rivers.  September 20: Boko Haram killed seven Nigerian soldiers in Damboa, Borno while "many/scores" (estimated at twenty) of Boko Haram militants were killed.  September 20: Suspected herdsmen killed five in Guma, Benue.  September 20: Gunmen killed two soldiers and one police officer while two of the attackers were killed during a clash in Ukwa West, Abia.  September 22: Military air strikes killed "several" (estimated at ten) Boko Haram militants in Bama, Borno.  September 23: Nigerian troops killed "several" (estimated at ten) Boko Haram commanders in Kukawa, Borno.  September 23: Communal violence led to two deaths in Izzi, Ebonyi.  September 24: Suspected herdsmen killed five in Jos South, Plateau.  September 24: Nigerian troops killed twenty-one bandits and lost three soldiers in Faskari, Katsina.  September 24: Chadian troops killed twenty Boko Haram militants in Barkalam and Bilabrim, Chad.   September 24: Air strikes killed "several" (estimated at ten) Boko Haram militants in Ngala, Borno. September 25: Air strikes killed "scores" (estimated at forty) of Boko Haram militants in Bama, Borno.  September 25: Boko Haram killed twelve police officers, five soldiers, four militia members, and nine civilians in Kukawa, Borno.  September 25: Nigerian troops killed two kidnappers in Nasarawa, Nasarawa.  September 25: Nigerian troops killed two bandits in Takum, Taraba. 
  • Nigeria
    Nigeria Security Tracker Weekly Update: September 12-18
    Below is a visualization and description of some of the most significant incidents of political violence in Nigeria from September 12 to September 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.     September 12: Bandits killed one and kidnapped sixteen in Chikun, Kaduna.  September 12: Bandits killed two in Okene, Kogi.  September 13: A military air strike killed "several" (estimated at ten) bandits in Birnin-Magaji/Kiyaw, Zamfara.  September 14: Bandits killed two Federal Road Safety Corps officials and kidnapped ten in Karu, Nassarawa.  September 14: Gunmen killed one and kidnapped "many" (estimated at ten) in Safana, Katsina.  September 14: Bandits killed one and abducted one in Faskari, Katsina.  September 14: Nigerian troops killed two bandits in Takum, Taraba.  September 14: Nigerian troops killed four militants in Bade, Yobe.  September 15: Gunmen killed one and kidnapped two in Gboyin, Ekiti.  September 15: Military strikes killed "several" (estimated at ten) bandits in Maru, Zamfara.  September 15: ISWA killed eight in Kaga LGA and three in Konduga LGA in Borno.  September 16: Kidnappers abducted eight in Chikun, Kaduna.  September 17: Bandits killed two police officers and kidnapped two civilians in Tangaza, Sokoto.  September 17: Police killed two robbers in Suleja, Niger.  September 17: Boko Haram killed ten Chadian soldiers in Lake Chad. September 17: The Nigerian Air Force killed "several" (estimated at ten) bandits in Maru, Zamfara.  September 17: Boko Haram killed three in Magumeri, Borno.  September 18: Bandits killed five farmers in Malumfashi, Katsina. September 18: Gunmen kidnapped seven in Igabi, Kaduna.  September 18: Gunmen killed one and kidnapped three in Dekina, Kogi. September 18: Kidnappers abducted two in Chikun, Kaduna. 
  • Nigeria
    Boko Haram Arms Stockpiling Indicates Long-Term Threat
    Eric G. Berman, director of the Small Arms Survey from 2016 to 2019 and formerly with the United Nations, has published widely on African peace and security issues. His current research focuses on arms flows in the Lake Chad Basin region. On September 2, Boko Haram (ISWA) militants reportedly killed 10 Nigerian soldiers in Borno state. Such bloodshed has become so commonplace that it often fails to garner much interest. International news outlets spilled little ink to report the incident. Nevertheless, the failures of the region's militaries—as well as the Lake Chad Basin Commission's Multi-National Joint Task Force (MNJTF)—to combat Boko Haram merit greater attention from policymakers and the international community.  The widespread and persistent human rights abuses Boko Haram routinely metes out against civilians is covered as routine. Indeed, readers of this blog will be familiar with CFR's ambitious multiyear Nigeria Security Tracker project. Most of the nearly 10,000 entries since 2011 refer to incidents of Boko Haram attacks. The International Crisis Group has issued numerous in-depth reports of Boko Haram's activities in Nigeria as well as in neighboring Cameroon, Chad, and Niger. Reporting on Boko Haram's arsenal and modes of acquisition exists, but is comparatively thin and largely anecdotal.   Boko Haram's strikes on the MNJTF and co-deployed national armed forces have been numerous and successful. Boko Haram has no shortage of targets. The MNJTF comprises thousands of troops from four LCBC member states: Cameroon, Chad, Niger, and Nigeria (Benin, not a LCBC member, also contributes). Soldiers from these countries—in much larger numbers—supplement this peacekeeping force and are co-deployed in the same sectors. An ongoing, partial review of open-source reporting on more than 100 attacks on armed forces personnel since 2015 reveals that Boko Haram has overrun fixed sites of companies and battalions in all four countries.  The true scale and scope of materiel Boko Haram has seized is very difficult to ascertain. Boko Haram has reason to inflate its military successes, and governments from the region have little incentive to publicize their losses. Reporting is imprecise. It is difficult to know strengths that correspond to “patrols,” “convoys,” “companies,” and “battalions.” There are persistent reports that soldiers lack proper levels of ammunition with which to defend themselves. Crew-served materiel as well as armored vehicles at fixed sites are often in disrepair and number below what military doctrine requires. What is not in doubt is that these attacks have netted Boko Haram millions of rounds of ammunition, thousands of assault rifles and assorted firearms, and hundreds of military vehicles, including armored tanks and self-propelled artillery. The seizure of non-lethal materiel, such as petrol, communications gear, and uniforms, also occurs on a sizeable scale and has important ramifications. Insurgent groups' attacks on peacekeepers and co-deployed military units and confiscation of lethal materiel is a long-standing and widespread phenomenon. But the success that Boko Haram has enjoyed is deeply worrisome.  Better understanding the full extent of the problem is an important first step. A study that moves past anecdotal accounts will enhance the prospects for accountability and facilitate security sector reform, which is of fundamental importance due to credible reports of poor morale and leadership. Enhanced stockpile management and record-keeping is also needed. Fortunately, existing arms control measures—many of them legally binding—already exist. But international and regional actors too often pay them lip service despite largely footing the bills. Arms export policies need to be reassessed given how much materiel is being lost to unintended recipients. This list is indicative and not exhaustive. States and organizations that contribute troops, military equipment, money, and political support for ongoing efforts to counter Boko Haram need to reassess their current approaches to combatting the threat. The United States has an important role to play as a strategic partner to states in the region and a generous funder of small arms management and destruction initiatives. Current efforts arguably empower and embolden the very target they seek to neutralize.
  • Nigeria
    Nigeria Security Tracker Weekly Update: September 5-11
    Below is a visualization and description of some of the most significant incidents of political violence in Nigeria from September 5 to September 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.     September 5: Sectarian violence led to one death in Irepodun, Osun.  September 5: Bandits killed one Nigerian Air Force officer in Birnin-Gwari, Kaduna.  September 6: Herdsmen killed three and kidnapped seven in Kajuru, Kaduna.  September 6: Boko Haram killed seven and kidnapped two in Maiduguri, Borno.  September 6: Nigerian troops killed one bandit in Guma, Benue.   September 6: Nigerian troops killed five Boko Haram/ISWA insurgents in Gwoza, Borno. September 6: Kidnappers killed one police officer, one Nigeria Security and Civil Defense Corps (NSCDC) official, and one civilian whom they had previously abducted in Chikun, Kaduna.   September 7: Gunmen killed one police officer in Ohafia, Abia.  September 7: Nigerian troops killed four bandits in Chikun, Kaduna.  September 8: A NSCDC officer killed one civilian in Obingwa, Abia.   September 8: Herdsmen killed one in Zangon Kataf LGA and one in Kauru LGA in Kaduna.  September 9: Bandits kidnapped three and killed one in Bungudu, Zamfara.  September 9: Herdsmen killed two in Keana, Nassarawa.  September 10: Gunmen kidnapped thirty in Gwagwalada, FCT.  September 11: Sectarian violence led to two deaths in Zangon Kataf, Kaduna.  
  • Nigeria
    Nigeria Security Tracker Weekly Update: August 29-September 4
    Below is a visualization and description of some of the most significant incidents of political violence in Nigeria from August 29 to September 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.     August 30: Police killed two Shiites in Kaduna, Kaduna.  August 30: Vigilantes killed three kidnappers in Damaturu, Yobe.  August 30: Sectarian violence led to two deaths in Anambra West, Anambra. August 31: Gunmen kidnapped three medical workers in Ose, Ondo.  August 31: Bandits kidnapped nine people in Shiroro, Niger state.  September 1: Nine Nigerian troops and twenty insurgents were killed during a clash in Magumeri, Borno.  September 1: The Nigerian Air Force killed "some" (estimated at ten) ISWA militants in Dikwa, Borno.  September 2: Bandits killed twenty-two and kidnapped twenty while police officers killed six bandits in Rafi, Niger.    September 2: Nigerian troops killed four bandits in Kachia, Kaduna.  September 2: ISWA killed ten Nigerian soldiers in Kukawa, Borno.  September 3: The Nigerian Air Force killed "several" (estimated at fifteen) bandits across two locations in Birnin-Gwari, Kaduna.  September 4: Two were killed in election-related violence in Yala, Cross River. 
  • Nigeria
    Nigeria Security Tracker Weekly Update: August 22-28
    Below is a visualization and description of some of the most significant incidents of political violence in Nigeria from August 22 to 28, 2020. This update also represents violence related to Boko Haram in Cameroon, Chad, and Niger. These incidents are included in the Nigeria Security Tracker.     August 22: Police killed three Shiite protestors in Kaduna, Kaduna.  August 23: Two State Security Service operatives and twenty-one IPOB members were killed during a clash in Enugu East, Enugu.  August 23: Nigerian troops killed one bandit in Bukkuyum LGA and one bandit in Anka LGA in Zamfara.  August 24: Gunmen attacked a school, killing one and kidnapping seven students and one teacher in Chikun, Kaduna.  August 24: Nigerian troops killed fifteen ISWA leaders in Ngala, Borno.  August 25: ISWA killed fourteen in Bulgaram, Cameroon.  August 27: ISWA/Boko Haram militants (the exact sect was unknown) killed two in Ngala, Borno.  August 27: Kidnappers killed two and abducted four in Chikun, Kaduna.  August 27: Bandits kidnapped four in Dandume, Katsina.  August 28: Boko Haram killed two and kidnapped two in Maiduguri, Borno. 
  • Nigeria
    Niger Attack Demonstrates Islamic State in West Africa’s Growing Reach
    Jacob Zenn is author of “Unmasking Boko Haram: Exploring Global Jihad in Nigeria,” which was published in April 2020 by Lynne Rienner in association with the Handa Centre for the Study of Terrorism and Political Violence, University of St Andrews. The Sahel and Nigeria were previously distinct areas of operations for jihadist groups. However, the lines between these areas of operations are now blurring. It may, therefore, become harder in the future to determine which of Islamic State West Africa (ISWA)’s branches carried out an attack when such an attack occurs between Niamey, Niger and northwestern Nigeria. On August 9, the Islamic State’s ‘province’ in the Sahel, known as Islamic State in Greater Sahara (ISGS), was suspected of killing six French NGO workers, their Nigerien guide, and one other Nigerien citizen. The victims were on safari near Niamey, Niger in a village where many expats take day trips to see the Sahel’s only remaining wild giraffes. Not only did these victims lose their lives, but any hopes for Niger’s tourism industry to revive after COVID-19 were also dashed. Al-Qaeda’s Sahelian affiliate, Group for Supporters of Islam and Muslims (JNIM), immediately disclaimed the attack. JNIM has generally avoided targeting Westerners since its 2017 formation and seeks an eventual negotiation with Mali’s government for a French and UN military withdrawal from Mali and some form of power-sharing deal involving sharia law. This would follow the negotiation model of the Taliban, to which JNIM is loyal. It would not have been in JNIM’s interest or consistent with its modus operandi to conduct this attack. Islamic State acknowledged the attack in the “news” section of its weekly magazine, al-Naba. It did not explicitly claim the attack, however. This was perhaps because Islamic State avoids claiming brutal killings of women–and one of the French NGO workers was a woman. ISWA, which is historically based in Nigeria’s Borno State and operates around Lake Chad, including in Niger, Chad, and Cameroon, has executed Nigerian female NGO workers. However, ISWA never officially claimed such executions through Islamic State media channels. Islamic State also never formally claimed the beheadings of European female tourists in Morocco, despite Islamic State supporters conducting those attacks. Adding to confusion surrounding the attack in Niger is that there are at least two factions of Boko Haram. One is headed by Abubakar Shekau and has no practical as opposed to theoretical affiliation with Islamic State, and the other, ISWA, is headed by a shura (consultative council), presents no individual leader, and claims affiliation with Islamic State. The relationship between Shekau’s faction and ISWA is mostly hostile but is also obscure, much like ambiguity surrounding ISWA’s precise relationship with the Islamic State. Confusion for outsiders is deepened by the fact that no faction will call itself “Boko Haram.” Shekau’s faction tends to focus on Borno, Nigeria and its neighbors, especially Chad. ISWA’s narratives take on a more regional and global perspective, However, as Shekau’s faction has undertaken operations beyond its traditional area of focus and near where ISWA operates in Borno and its borderlands, it sometimes becomes difficult to attribute specific incidents to one faction or the other. Before Islamic State announced that ISWA incorporated not only the Borno, Nigeria-based group, but also ISGS into one ‘province’ in March 2019, the latter entity had existed from 2015 informally as an Islamic State ‘brigade.’ This includes when it conducted the 2017 ambush that killed four U.S. special forces members and four Nigerien soldiers in Tongo Tongo, Niger. As late as March 2019, therefore, ISWA comprised two separate entities: one Borno branch and another Sahel branch in the Niger-Burkina Faso-Mali border axis. Both are distinct from the Shekau faction. The attack on the French NGO workers, which would be the ISWA Sahel branch’s southernmost attack, occurred 150 miles from northwestern Nigeria’s Sokoto State. It was also in Sokoto that ISWA’s Borno branch claimed an attack that was organized from across the border in Niger in 2019. Such attacks near the Sokoto, Nigeria-Niger border represent the expansion of both ISWA branches' traditional areas of operations and indicate the two branches are converging. In recent months there have been other signs of the Shekau faction establishing bases in northwestern Nigeria, particularly Niger State. Meanwhile, the smaller and lone al-Qaeda-loyal faction in Nigeria, Ansaru, has claimed several attacks since January in Kaduna State, which is located roughly between Niger State and Sokoto State. These trend lines suggest the area between Niamey, Niger and Niger State, Nigeria will not be spared from jihadist groups’ attacks any longer and ISWA’s two branches, Shekau’s faction, and Ansaru will all be competing for recruits in the same areas.
  • Nigeria
    Nigeria Security Tracker Weekly Update: August 15-21
    Below is a visualization and description of some of the most significant incidents of political violence in Nigeria from August 15 to 21, 2020. This update also represents violence related to Boko Haram in Cameroon, Chad, and Niger. These incidents are included in the Nigeria Security Tracker.     August 15: Kidnappers abducted a Yobe community leader in Fune, Yobe.  August 15: Boko Haram killed three soldiers in Ngala, Borno.  August 15: Nigerian troops killed three arms smugglers in Sabon Birni, Sokoto.  August 16: Air strikes killed "several" (estimated at ten) Boko Haram militants in Marte, Borno.  August 16: Air strikes killed "several" (estimated at ten) Boko Haram militants in Dikwa, Borno.  August 16: Nigerian troops killed three bandits in Zurmi, Zamfara.  August 16: Fulani militia killed four and abducted one in Kajuru, Kaduna.  August 16: Fulani militia killed four in Kachia, Kaduna.  August 17: Two soldiers, one civilian, and "many" (estimated at ten) Boko Haram militants were killed during an attack in Magumeri, Borno.  August 17: Kidnappers abducted two foreigners in Rafi, Niger state and subsequently killed one of them.  August 17:  Three Nigerian soldiers, nine civilians, and an "unspecified number" (estimated at five) of bandits were killed during a clash in Rafi, Niger state.  August 17: Nigerian troops killed "several" (estimated at ten) Boko Haram militants in Marte, Borno.  August 17: Nigerian troops killed twenty ISWA commanders in Bama, Borno.  August 18: Three soldiers and eight Boko Haram militants were killed during a clash in which Boko Haram also kidnapped one hundred civilians in Kukawa, Borno.  August 18: Fulani militia killed two in Zangon Kataf, Kaduna.  August 19: The Nigerian Air Force killed "some" (estimated at ten) Boko Haram militants in Ngala, Borno.  August 19: Gunmen killed seven in Nembe, Bayelsa.  August 20: Sectarian violence led to three deaths in Gassol, Taraba. 
  • Nigeria
    Nigeria Security Tracker Weekly Update: August 8-14
    Below is a visualization and description of some of the most significant incidents of political violence in Nigeria from August 8 to 14, 2020. This update also represents violence related to Boko Haram in Cameroon, Chad, and Niger. These incidents are included in the Nigeria Security Tracker.     August 8: Gunmen killed "some" (estimated at five) civilians in Tai, Rivers.  August 9: Bandits abducted "several" women (estimated at five) in Kurfi, Katsina.  August 10: Three were killed during violence that broke out at a protest in Oye, Ekiti.  August 10: Gunmen killed thirteen civilians in Apa, Benue.  August 10: Boko Haram killed thirteen civilians in Magumeri, Borno.  August 10: Boko Haram killed "several" (estimated at five) soldiers in Kukawa, Borno.  August 11: Military air strikes killed "several" (estimated at ten) Boko Haram militants in Bama, Borno.  August 12: Gunmen killed fifteen civilians in Mariga, Niger state.  August 12: Military air strikes killed "several" (estimated at ten) ISWA militants in Ngala, Borno.  August 12: Gunmen killed one and kidnapped two in Faskari, Katsina.  August 13: Gunmen killed a Bauchi assembly member and kidnapped two wives and one child in Dass, Bauchi.  August 13: The Nigerian air force killed "several" (estimated at ten) bandits in Birnin-Gwari, Kaduna. 
  • Boko Haram
    Mass Defection of Boko Haram Fighters in Cameroon
    Nigerian Major General Ibrahim Manu Yusuf, commander of the Multinational Joint Task Force (MJTF) fighting the Boko Haram Islamist insurgency in the Lake Chad Basin, announced August 7 that 109 Boko Haram fighters and their prisoners had defected on the Nigerian-Cameroonian border. Yusuf said the defection was encouraged by a campaign through which Boko Haram fighters who defect would be pardoned. This specific group of defectors have been taken to the Cameroonian Center for Disarmament, Demobilization, and Reintegration. The facility reportedly was built to accommodate 100 but already has 250 residents. According to Voice of America (VOA), the defectors consisted of forty-five Nigerian and three Cameroonian fighters, forty-five Nigerian children, and sixteen women, characterized as "sex slaves." It is not clear whether the women and children had been kidnapped. One defector said he had joined Boko Haram in return for a promised motorcycle. He said that in the two years he had been part of the movement he had been unable to see his two wives, perhaps implying that his participation was coerced. There are many questions to be answered. Were the defectors coerced into joining Boko Haram? Were the women and children coerced? Or did the defectors include family units? What were the motivations behind joining Boko Haram and then defecting? Finally, what will happen to them now, in an over-crowded rehabilitation facility? Voice of America has expanded its on-the-ground coverage in Borno; it is to be anticipated that there will be more objective reporting on Boko Haram and the MJTF.   
  • Nigeria
    Nigeria Security Tracker Weekly Update: August 1-7
    Below is a visualization and description of some of the most significant incidents of political violence in Nigeria from August 1 to 7, 2020. This update also represents violence related to Boko Haram in Cameroon, Chad, and Niger. These incidents are included in the Nigeria Security Tracker.   var divElement = document.getElementById('viz1597073429766'); var vizElement = divElement.getElementsByTagName('object')[0]; vizElement.style.width='750px';vizElement.style.height='790px'; var scriptElement = document.createElement('script'); scriptElement.src = 'https://public.tableau.com/javascripts/api/viz_v1.js'; vizElement.parentNode.insertBefore(scriptElement, vizElement);   August 1: Boko Haram killed eighteen civilians in Mayo-Moskota, Cameroon. August 2: Police officers killed three kidnappers in Etche, Rivers.  August 2: Cultists killed five in Akpabuyo, Cross River.  August 2: A Boko Haram suicide bomber killed herself and two others in Konduga, Borno.  August 3: Police officers killed one protestor in Isoko North, Delta.  August 3: Gunmen killed one journalist and one other in Nassarawa Egon, Nassarawa.  August 4: Nigerian troops killed six pirates in Southern Ijaw, Bayelsa.  August 5: Gunmen killed four at a church in Yenegoa, Bayelsa.  August 5: Fulani killed thirty-three in Zangon Kataf, Kaduna.  August 6: Police officers killed ten bandits in Batsari, Katsina.  August 6: Nigerian troops killed ten bandits in Dutsinma, Katsina. 
  • Nigeria
    Borno Governor Survives Boko Haram Attack in Nigeria
    On July 29, Boko Haram operatives attacked a convoy with Babagana Zulum, governor of Borno state, near the town of Baga. According to media reports, the governor was unharmed, but there were casualties in his entourage. In the aftermath of the attack, the governor has been scathing in his criticism of the Nigerian army: "You people said there is no Boko Haram here, then who attacked us?" And, "You have been here for over one year now, there are 1,181 soldiers here, if you cannot take over Baga which is less than 5km from your base, then we should forget about Baga." The shehu of Borno, the highest-ranking Islamic traditional ruler in Borno and among the Kanuri people, himself a survivor of a Boko Haram attack, commented "no one is safe." From photographs in the Nigerian media, the convoy appears to have been heavily armed. The governor was on his way to a camp for internally displaced persons to distribute food relief.  Zulum was elected governor of Borno in 2019 on the ticket of the All Progressives Congress, the political party of President Muhammadu Buhari. A professor at the University of Maiduguri, he is an agricultural engineer. Baga formerly was a fishing port on Lake Chad. As the lake has shrunk, Baga is now inland, but there is still an important fish market on its outskirts. It has been a large Nigeria military base in the past, though it does not appear to be one now. It has been the scene of recurrent Boko Haram attacks, notably in 2015 when there were an estimated two thousand killed, and again in 2018, though with far fewer casualties.  Nigerian media plausibly attribute the attack to the Islamic State in West Africa (ISWA) faction of Boko Haram. It follows the ISWA's release of a video showing the execution-style murder of five aid workers. The two episodes are not necessarily related, but they are manifestations of heightened Boko Haram activity in Borno. All factions of Boko Haram seek to kill officials of the Nigerian state, such as the governor, traditional Muslim leaders, such as the shehu, who cooperate with the secular state, and of course, military personnel. In fact, according to the Nigeria Security Tracker, the period from July 2018 to the present has been deadlier for security service personnel than at any other time in the ten-year conflict. The governor's post-attack comment, "then we should forget about Baga," raises the question of whether Nigerian federal and state authorities will increasingly leave contested territory to Boko Haram factions.
  • Nigeria
    Nigeria Security Tracker Weekly Update: July 25–31
    Below is a visualization and description of some of the most significant incidents of political violence in Nigeria from July 25 to 31, 2020. This update also represents violence related to Boko Haram in Cameroon, Chad, and Niger. These incidents are included in the Nigeria Security Tracker.   var divElement = document.getElementById('viz1596464749403'); var vizElement = divElement.getElementsByTagName('object')[0]; vizElement.style.width='750px';vizElement.style.height='790px'; var scriptElement = document.createElement('script'); scriptElement.src = 'https://public.tableau.com/javascripts/api/viz_v1.js'; vizElement.parentNode.insertBefore(scriptElement, vizElement);   July 25: A Nigerian task force killed three kidnappers in Okene, Kogi.  July 25: Boko Haram killed ten soldiers in Damboa, Borno.  July 25: Nigerian troops killed two bandits in Jibia, Katsina.  July 26: Boko Haram/ISWA executed three of their own in Kukawa, Borno.  July 27: Herdsmen killed a police officer in Bassa, Plateau.  July 27: Police officers killed two kidnappers in Ishielu, Ebonyi.  July 27: Militia members killed five in Toto, Nassarawa.  July 28: Kidnappers abducted five in Suleja, Niger state.  July 28: Police officers killed three bandits in Dutsinma, Katsina.  July 29: Gunmen killed fourteen in Kotonkarfe, Kogi.  July 29: Robbers killed four police officers in Ohaukwu, Ebonyi.  July 29: Four robbers and one police officer were killed during a bank robbery in Kajola, Oyo.  July 29: Bandits killed one and kidnapped three in Chikun, Kaduna.  July 30: A Boko Haram mortar attack killed seven in Maiduguri, Borno.  July 31: Boko Haram killed ten in Tenana, Chad.  July 31: Gunmen killed a traditional ruler in Nassarawa, Nassarawa. July 31: Herdsmen kidnapped two in Isi-Uzo, Enugu.
  • Nigeria
    Islamic State Boko Haram Faction Murders Aid Workers in Video
    The Islamic State in West Africa (ISWA) released a video of its execution-style murder of five aid workers in the northeastern Nigerian state of Borno. The victims were employees of Action Against Hunger, a Nigerian affiliate of France's Agency for Technical Cooperation and Development, the International Rescue Committee (IRC), and REACH International. Two others appear to have been Nigerian government employees, one a "security worker" and the other a displaced persons camp coordinator. Compared to the Shekau-led faction of Boko Haram, ISWA has tended to avoid killing Muslim civilians. They made exceptions for people working for or with the government, NGOs, or international agencies, all of which they see as “foreign” and “Western” interventions. The penchant for avoiding Muslim civilians could be eroding, however, as recent attacks indicate. ISWA is known to kidnap its victims for ransom. If ransom fails, it then murders them, which may have been the issue here. The IRC employee in June was filmed by his captors, imploring his employer to save him. Ransom payments appear to be an important source of funding for terrorist organizations in West Africa. Paying ransom is illegal in Nigeria. While the United States government does not pay, other governments do, though they usually deny it. Kidnapping for ransom has become a widespread criminal activity in Nigeria, with many private individuals and entities paying.  In northern Nigeria, terrorist groups filming execution-style murders is an old song. As a terror tactic, it appears to work with a population already under stress. The Nigerian security services, principally the army, have failed to defeat Boko Haram militarily, yet there is no diplomatic or other initiative underway. Nor have jihadi groups signaled any willingness to talk. In what may be a related development, soldiers are resigning in large numbers from the Nigerian army, leading at least in part to the National Assembly's demand that all the service chiefs resign.