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Nigeria Is Winning The Battle Against Boko Haram But It Is Still Losing The War. - Politics - Nairaland

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Nigeria Is Winning The Battle Against Boko Haram But It Is Still Losing The War. by Chelseafan99: 12:55am On Dec 30, 2015
Hilary Matfess December 29, 2015 Quartz Africa

Boko Haram is being blamed for a suicide bombing that killed 30 people in Maiduguri in north east Nigeria.

On Dec. 24, Nigeria’s president Muhammadu Buhari told the BBC the Nigerian military had met an end-of-year deadline for routing out the Boko Haram militant sect when he claimed the insurgency had been “technically defeated.” While the view from the country’s capital city Abuja may suggest the sect is no longer capable of engaging in “conventional attacks” against the Nigerian military, as Buhari claims, the situation on the ground suggests otherwise.

The president’s announcement underestimates the characteristics and strength of the insurgency perhaps in order to gain a quick PR win.
But when you speak with those displaced by the insurgency, three things become clear: the Nigerian government’s conceptualization of the challenge is flawed; the increased military pressure on Boko Haram has been helpful, but is still a long way from restoring stability; and the government cannot afford to consider a military defeat of the sect as a resolution to the crisis in Nigeria’s north east.

Since coming into office in May 2015, Buhari has accelerated the Nigerian government’s response to the Boko Haram insurgency, moving the military headquarters for the effort to Maiduguri, the north eastern city where Boko Haram was founded. The new strategy re-emphasized the importance of the Multi-National Joint Task Force, and successfully reclaiming a number of communities formerly under Boko Haram’s control.
The revitalized response was received warmly by Nigerians; having claimed more than 30,000 lives in six years, the insurgency is a near-constant source of media coverage and speculation in Nigeria today.

Boko Haram’s ‘hit and run’ attacks on soft targets, is less evidence of the sect’s decline but rather a return to previous tactics.

However, the current coverage of the Islamic militants portrays it as a territory-seeking insurgency, instead of recognizing that this tactic was a result of being pushed out of the country’s urban centers in a previous military push under former president Goodluck Jonathan.

The evidence that Boko Haram is now engaging in ‘hit and run’ attacks in city centers, including suicide bombings on soft targets, is less evidence of the decline of the sect, but rather of a return to its previous tactics. This means that, rather than claiming a ‘technical’ victory, the Nigerian government should be recalibrating its response to engage in urban operations.
Mohammed Kyari, the director for the Center for Peace and Security Studies at Modibbo Adama University in Yola, and an expert on the Boko Haram insurgency, notes there’s a significant debate over Boko Haram’s real objectives. This necessarily complicates the military’s ability to undermine the sect. Kyari observes that, “Clearly they say they want to impose sharia… but Sharia is a very loaded concept. I’m uncertain of what they mean by sharia. You see, every crime in Boko Haram is punished by death. Sharia in the Quran has levels of punishment, so clearly Boko Haram is not Sharia.” Even more importantly, Kyari argues that “they neither have the knowledge nor the power to enforce Sharia. So what is their objective? To make our lives abnormal. And they have succeeded.”

Boko Haram’s intent on destabilizing the Nigerian state, ostensibly to create more space for the propagation and adoption of their ideology, has wreaked havoc across the country’s north east. In addition to the incredible number of lives lost, the insurgency has displaced an estimated three million to five million people, shut down trade networks surrounding Maiduguri, Kano, and Mubi, and prevented a number of communities from farming for up to five years.

The strain of caring for the displaced is already taxing the state and community’s resources, prompting calls for the reconstruction of destroyed communities and the resettlement of the displaced as soon as possible. A number of National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) employees in camps throughout Adamawa, one of the worst hit states in the north east, reported they expected to end operations in the first two weeks of 2016.

“That mattress belongs to a woman we know who tried to return home, but was killed.”

Though the process of resettling displaced people in Borno State has begun and the federal government has announced its intention to close camps for Internally Displaced People (IDPs) in 2016, a number of obstacles remain in resettling so many people. One woman, who fled Boko Haram a few months ago and now lives with her younger brother in Mubi, told me that she is afraid to return home. “We know so many people that have been killed when they returned,” she then gestured to a mattress rolled around various household goods and tied with twine, “that belongs to a woman we know who tried to return to Madagali, but was killed.”
Even for those who are brave enough to resettle (or are forced to do so by the government), they often return home with nothing, only to find that either Boko Haram or the Nigerian Military have burned down houses and fields. In order for security to be lasting in the north east, a broader definition of security must be adopted. It is not enough to degrade Boko Haram’s operational capacity, citizens in the North East must be assisted as they rebuild their homes, revitalize local economies, and re-establish trade routes.
‘Technically defeating’ Boko Haram this month sets the Buhari administration up to announce in a few weeks that all of the IDPs have been resettled—marking a technical end to that crisis as well. Unfortunately, technical victories in these instances seem not to be lasting ones. Already, in the last couple of days Boko Haram has struck with suicide bombers killing tens of people including 30 people in Maiduguri and another 25 persons in Madagali .
Restoring peace to Nigeria requires a more holistic approach to understanding the objectives and effects of the violence, with the ultimate aim being the empowerment of communities to revitalize their local economies and personal livelihood.

Quartz Africa.

My OPINION


This ill informed article that dwells on the negative while playing down the positive is the reason the West, with all its power and wealth is doing badly while Africa achieves success. Rather than highlight the remarkable gains made by poor Africa the author in her racist mentality chooses to do the opposite, same way the Western media tried to downplay Nigeria’s Ebola victory, claiming the victory was borne out of luck rather than competence. Countless Nigerians fought with their blood as the insensitive Western arms embargo gave Boko Haram the advantage. Despite Boko Haram being the deadliest terrorist organisation Nigeria was largely abandoned to its fate as a coalition of 65 of the worlds richest and most powerful countries rushed to the aid of Syria. But despite this we percevered. Despite the arms embargo and negative propaganda the spirit of the Nigerian nation has once again shown it can never be subdued.

Is it such a bitter pill to swallow that the African people are suceeding where the worlds economic and military superpower falter? Kenya, which has the best equiped military in EastbAfrica has archived tremendous success against the al-Shahab Jihadi group, the Western media will never this success. Nigeria has again ohstacles militating against it have been able to route Boko Haram out of thenSambisa forest, an area nearly twice the size of Scotland. This ismno small feat, we are talking aboutnthe deadoiest Jihadi group on Earth with more fighters than the entire armies of Chad and Cameroon combined, yet the media is not interested in the positives of the great people of Africa.

Meanwhile the Iraqi army,,flush with the best American weaponry and billions in financial aid has finally taken back Ramadi (%25 stillmunder ISIS control), we are finally being bombarded with non stop coverage of this victory.

The West should be ashamed of itself for its prejudiced mentality about Africa and its capability. Shame on Great Britain, our colonial master and supposed ally who looked the other way as her second largest ex colony, a member of the Comon Wealth of Nations was being pummeledby the West.

Africa might still be regarded as the Dark Continent, a peopoe notmworthy ofmrespect or unconditional assistance. Africa might still be trodded upon, but i knowm that someday Africa as unified people shall rise. OurTimeWillCome, and whenmthat time comes the world will listen when Africa speaks.

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https://ourtimeiscome./2015/12/29/nigeria-is-winning-the-battle-with-boko-haram-but-it-is-still-losing-the-war/


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Re: Nigeria Is Winning The Battle Against Boko Haram But It Is Still Losing The War. by ibe9ja: 12:56am On Dec 30, 2015
Ok

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