
Boko Haram fighters have launched multiple killing sprees in past months — blasting villages and often scaring off the Army in the northeast region.
Over
the past few weeks I have been hearing from a number of credible
interlocutors that Boko Haram fighters are indeed better than government
forces. They suggest that Boko Haram has not crumbled to the Nigerian
military because of some factors.
These factors can also be identified among other successful fighters in various parts of the world.
They
have been involved in bank robberies and kidnappings for ransom. Many
of the latter incidents go unreported, so it is difficult to judge what
the magnitude might be, but they are a valuable domestic source of
revenue. I have seen little to no credible evidence that a significant
source of funding comes from abroad, except for various cross-border
criminal activities, including smuggling.
The
same is true of the weaponry that Boko Haram employs. I have seen
little evidence that weapons stockpiles from Libya have a transformative
presence in Nigeria. Boko Haram attacks certainly employ a quantity of
weapons, but their sophistication does not appear to give them a
noticeable advantage.
On the other
hand, government forces are allegedly poorly equipped, do not receive
their pay on time, and do not receive regular medical services. Pensions
paid to widows can be erratic.
There
were also complaints about inadequate equipment and pay during the
campaign in Mali last year when Nigerian soldiers were reportedly forced
to ask for food from local Malian communities.
They were also
restricted to manning checkpoints in the capital region because they
lacked equipment to deploy further afield.
Muslim Rights Concern raised such shortcomings in northern Nigeria, as I cited in a blog post on February 27, 2014.
Some
observers suggest that government forces simply run away when Boko
Haram approaches, and that is ostensibly why the security check points
are not manned. Their motivation is fear:— and it is a well placed fear
given that Boko Haram has a long tradition of killing any person in the
security services that it can.
Traditionally,
the policy of the Nigerian government has been to not assign soldiers
or police to service in their native regions. Some of my interlocutors
suggest this remains true for officers deployed to the regions under the
state of emergency; but over-stretched operational requirements and
personnel shortages have meant modification to this policy with respect
to foot soldiers.
Now, it was
suggested, many soldiers in the north are from the north. As such, they
are particularly fearful of Boko Haram, both from first-hand knowledge
and, presumably, fear for their families.
Such
points about the strengths of Boko Haram fighters and the weaknesses of
the government’s security forces are credible. I would caution that the
factors of Boko Haram strength most likely apply to the most
ideologically or religiously committed of Islamist fighters, not to the
criminal or other score-settling elements, or the political factions
that are likely part of the general insurgency.
Similarly,
the northeast of Nigeria is geographically expansive. Conditions among
the government’s security personnel likely vary from place to place.
By John Campbell, a former U.S. Ambassador to Nigeria
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