US military and intelligence officials believe that the ISIS fighters that ambushed and killed four US troops in Niger last October fled back across the border into Mali and have remained there since, according to an administration official directly familiar with the latest assessment, like reported by cnn.com.
Uganda deploys air force to pursue Islamic militants in Somalia
The Uganda People’s Defence Air Force has for the first time sent a contingent of ace pilots to support the ongoing African Union (AU) peace operations in Somalia, like reported by newvision.co.ug.
The air force will provide aerial escort for convoys, reconnaissance operations along the supply routes, medical evacuation, air search and rescue as well as aerial combat against the al-Shabaab in Mogadishu.
The contingent of airmen and women and helicopters was flagged off yesterday by the chief of defence forces Gen. Aronda Nyakairima and the commander of the air force Gen. Jim Owoyesigire. Aronda handed over the AU flag to the contingent commander Lt. Col. Chris Kaija.
Gen. Owoyesigire said that the utility helicopters will be used to support the ground troops in line with the unapproved mandate for troops deployed in Somalia under the African Mission in Somalia (AMISOM).
The Ugandan air force is to provide air cover in the areas of Somalia which are occupied by the contingents from Burundi, Djibouti and Uganda, according to Gen. Aronda.
Gen. Aronda said that the Uganda air force has formally joined AMISOM after the deployment was authorised by President Yoweri Museveni and endorsed by the African Union and the UN.
Addressing the air force personnel, Gen. Aronda said, “We have won battles in Somalia but we are yet to win the war. I have no doubt that you have been prepared and you are ready to go and support AMISOM. Go and support the ground forces which have done credible work.”
Aronda said that the deployment of the air force is coming at a time when Somalis are going for parliamentary and presidential elections this month.
According to Gen. Aronda, with Mogadishu now pacified, the ground troops presently have to move long distances in the rest of the country and need rapid response which can be provided by the air force.
Nigeria: more than 90 schoolgirls missing after Boko Haram attack
More than 90 Nigerian schoolgirls are feared missing after Islamist insurgent group Boko Haram attacked a village in the northeastern state of Yobe, two sources told Reuters.
Their disappearance, if confirmed, would be one of the largest since Boko Haram abducted more than 270 schoolgirls from the town of Chibok in 2014. That case drew global attention to the nine-year insurgency, which has sparked what the United Nations has called one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises.
A roll-call at the girls’ school on Tuesday showed that 91 students were absent, said the two people with direct knowledge of the matter.
“I saw girls crying and wailing in three Tata vehicles and they were crying for help,” said a witness from the nearby village of Gumsa who was reportedly forced to show the insurgents the way out of the area and then released.
Reuters was unable to verify the witness’s account that Boko Haram had abducted girls in the attack on Dapchi on Monday evening. Nigerian police and the regional education ministry denied any abductions had taken place, but parents and other witnesses also told Reuters some girls were still missing.
The two sources, several parents and other local witnesses who spoke to Reuters did so on condition of anonymity because they had been warned by Nigerian security and government officials not to disclose the disappearance.
Seven parents told Reuters their daughters were among the missing.
“I hope my daughter is not one of those abducted as we learned that over ninety of them were not seen after going through their register book,” one parent said.
SHOTS FIRED AT SCHOOL
The Boko Haram militants arrived in Dapchi on Monday evening in trucks, some mounted with heavy guns and painted in military camouflage, witnesses told Reuters.
The insurgents went directly to the school, shooting sporadically, sending students and teachers fleeing, the witnesses said, adding that some people had returned to Dapchi after spending the night hiding in the bush.
Nigerian security forces have begun a search and rescue mission, two people said.
Yobe state Police Commissioner Sumonu Abdulmaliki on Tuesday told reporters Boko Haram had not abducted any girls in Dapchi.
“They fired shots and left the town toward Gaidam… in the night, where they abducted three people,” he said.
The state ministry of education also said there had been no established case of abduction, but shut the Dapchi school for a week to allow students to be reunited with their families.
More than 20,000 people have been killed and two million forced to flee their homes in the northeast of Africa’s most populous nation since Boko Haram began its insurgency in 2009.
Of around 270 girls originally abducted from their school in Chibok in April 2014, about 60 escaped soon afterwards and others have since been released after mediation. Around 100 are still believed to be in captivity.
Last month, the group released a video purporting to show some of the Chibok girls still in its custody, saying they do not wish to return home.
Aid groups say Boko Haram has kidnapped thousands more adults and children, many of whose cases are neglected.
Kenya: 3 christians shot dead by Islamist Al Shabaab militants in primary school
Three Christians were shot dead by members of the Islamic extremist group Al Shabaab in north-east Kenya last Friday, according to Morning Star News.
Sources told Morning Star News that two Christian teachers and the wife of one of them were killed after being targeted by suspected terrorists from the Somali rebel group who broke into the staff sleeping quarters at the Qarsa Primary School in Somali Wajir, some 100 miles from the Somali border.
It is not clear that the victims were targeted because they were Christians and Morning Star News reported that they may have been killed because they were not local.
But after killing Seth Oluoch Odada, his wife Caroline and another teacher, Kevin Shari, one of the assailants reportedly said in the Somali language, ‘These infidels [non-Muslims] should be wiped out,’ a teacher who survived the attack told a worker at Wajir Referral Hospital, with the worker recounting this to Morning Star News.
The pastor of a local church, un-named for security reasons, told Morning Star News that Odada and his wife attended his church. It was not known if Shari belonged to a church.
The pastor said: ‘We are very concerned about this selective kind of attack on non-locals who are also Christians in this region. Our other church members are not safe. Many of the church members, including teachers, have started fleeing the area to their home villages, and some did not attend the church for the Sunday service.’
The victims’ bodies have been transferred to Chiromo Mortuary in Nairobi.
The hospital worker said that after shooting the couple, one of the assailants entered the house Shari shared with the surviving teacher and shot at Shari, with the same bullet striking the hand of the survivor, who fell down and pretended to be dead. The injured man reportedly said that the shooter wore a mask typical of Al Shabaab militants.
The area pastor said that there is a belief in the area that local people have joined Al Shabaab.
‘I think these are the people who killed the three Christians,’ he said.
According to Morning Star News, Wajir is becoming increasingly dangerous for Christians since Al Shabaab militants appear to have shifted from Mandera, where they carried out attacks in the past few years before the government recently erected a 10-kilometre wall on its border.
Fear has gripped Christians in Wajir, the pastor said.
Meanwhile, in Garissa, about 200 miles south of Wajir and also near the Somali border, Al Shabaab has also been active, with the pastors’ fellowship in Garissa reporting that several members did not appear for Sunday services.
‘We as the pastors fellowship do register our concern to the government to protect Christians living in this volatile north-eastern country,’ the chairman of the fellowship said.
Rebels from Al Shabaab, which is linked to Al Qaeda, have launched several attacks in north-east Kenya since Kenyan forces led an African coalition into Somalia against the rebels in October 2011 in response to terrorist attacks on tourists and others on Kenya’s coast, Morning Star News reported.
The Islamic extremist militants have also recently attacked in Kenya’s coastal area, killing four Christians on September 6 last year.
Kenya is ranked 32nd on the Open Doors’ 2018 World Watch List of the 50 countries where it is most difficult to be a Christian.
Nigeria: Islamist Boko Haram attacks girls’ school in Yobe
Boko Haram jihadists launched an attack on a girls boarding school in northeast Nigeria but the students and teachers fled to safety, witnesses said Monday according to vanguardngr.com.
A convoy of fighters in pickup trucks descended on Dapchi village in the Bursari area of Yobe state around 6 pm (1700 GMT) targeting the school, resident Sheriff Aisami told AFP.
“When they stormed the village they began shooting and setting off explosives,” Aisami said. “This drew the attention of the girls in the Girls Science Secondary School, so the girls and the teachers were able to escape before the attackers got into the school.”
Unable to kidnap the girls, the Boko Haram fighters looted the school before fleeing. “There was an attack on the girls secondary school in Dapchi by Boko Haram,” said a member of a local civilian militia battling the extremists. “Obviously the attack was meant to abduct school girls but luckily they found none of the girls as they were taken away by teachers before they arrived,” said the militia member, who declined to provide his name for safety reasons. “Military jets were deployed and are in pursuit”, he added. It’s unclear whether anyone was killed in the violence.
The attack recalls Boko Haram’s audacious kidnapping of more than 200 schoolgirls from the town of Chibok in April, 2014. The kidnapping drew the world’s attention to the jihadist insurgency in northeast Nigeria. Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari, a former general, came to power in 2015 on a platform promising to stamp out the Islamist movement. But despite retaking swathes of territory from Boko Haram, the group continues to stage attacks targeting both civilians and military targets, and frequently uses young girls as suicide bombers.
Since 2009, the Boko Haram insurgency has left at least 20,000 dead and made over 2.6 million more homeless.
Mali: French forces kill, capture Jihadist leaders of Ansar Al-Din as well as of Al-Mourabitoune
French military forces have carried out a daring raid in Mali in which they eliminated or detained 23 Islamist terrorists, and killed or captured important leaders of two regional “Jihadist” groups, a top army officer said according to kuna.net.kw.
The French army Chief-of-Staff General Francois Lecointre said that the raid took place in the north-east of Mali and the attack successfully targeted the Ansar Al-Din and Al Mourabitoune terrorist groups.
The operation was carried out overnight on February 13-14, the General said in the statement.
“Twenty-three terrorists, including the chiefs of Ansar Al-Din as well as of Al-Mourabitoune, known for their abuses against the Malian population, were killed or captured in this operation,” Lecointre indicated.
He also noted that the operation included air strikes followed by helicopter attacks and intervention by ground troops, adding that this was “a significant blow to armed terrorist groups.” France has deployed around 4,000 troops in the Sahel region in an operation dubbed “Barkhane,” which covers Chad, Mali, Mauritania, Niger and Burkina Faso.
Mali: French raid killed ten jihadists
French air power killed at least 10 jihadists in northeast Mali near the border with Algeria, local and foreign military sources said according to france24.com
“French forces led at least one raid near Tinzaouatene, at the Algerian border, against the terrorists,” a local Malian military source told AFP.
“There were at least 10 deaths and two vehicles were destroyed.”
An ex colonel in the Malian army who had defected, who is close to the jihadists’ leader, was killed in the raid, according to an army statement.
“This was the base of the head of the network, Iyad Ag Ghaly, at Tinzaouatene, which was the main target of the operation,” a foreign security source in Mali told AFP.
The offensive was part of France’s Operation Barkhane, active in Mali as well as four other former French colonies in west Africa Mauritania, Niger, Chad and Burkina Faso.
These countries form the so-called G5 Sahel, a French-supported group that launched a joint military force to combat jihadists last year.
The Malian source said the French force had been conducting operations in northeastern Mali for several days.
A foreign military source confirmed that “several” raids had been carried out in the region on Wednesday, killing at least 10 jihadists.
Islamic extremists linked to Al-Qaeda took control of the desert north of Mali in early 2012, but were largely driven out in a French-led military operation launched in January 2013.
However large tracts of the country remain lawless despite a peace accord signed with ethnic Tuareg leaders in mid-2015 aimed at isolating the jihadists.
On Tuesday in neighbouring Burkina Faso meanwhile, a policeman was killed and two were injured in an attack at a village near the eastern town of Fada N’Gourma, in a region that has largely escaped Islamist unrest.
The assailants’ identity was unknown.
Northern Burkina Faso has seen frequent attacks by suspected jihadists, with two police killed late last month in the town of Baraboule.
Nigerian troops clear Boko Haram Sabil Huda hideout, free 19 women, 27 children
Nigerian Army troops attached to Operation Lafiya Dole, on Monday, dislodged Boko Haram terrorists from Sabil Huda, their hideout in the expansive Sambisa Forest. The troop also freed 19 women and 27 children from captivity. The clear out was part of the ongoing Operation Deep Punch 11, which is aimed a dislodging the terrorists from all their hideouts, like reported by saharareporters.com.
The success of the troops was announced in a statement signed by Colonel Onyeama Nwachukwu, Deputy Public Relations Director of Operation Lafiya Dole Theatre Command.
“It is in this vein that they dislodged Boko Haram terrorists from one of their highly fortified hideouts around the S-shaped part of the Sambisa Forest close to Sabil Huda. The location was also believed to be one of their prized hideouts,” said the statement.
It added that the effort to dislodge the terrorists entailed a fierce offensive, which was supported by the Nigerian Air Force. The troops, the statement further disclosed, captured major armaments. These included two Spartan Armoured Personnel Carriers (APC), one Canter truck and one laptop computer from the insurgents.
In addition, the troops also destroyed eight gun trucks and makeshift accommodation/tents.
Nigerian Boko Haram jihadists ‘set to infiltrate Europe through Libya’ like migrants
When Ibrahim was nine years old, Boko Haram militants chopped off his friend’s hand and dipped the stump in boiling oil.
Much of his family had been butchered by the group; when he was 11, he saw a jihadi shooting his father dead, like reported by dailymail.co.uk.
‘When I think about Boko Haram I have no emotion,’ he told MailOnline in Bikari camp in Maiduguri, the wartorn capital of Borno state in northeastern Nigeria. ‘I don’t think I feel anything any more.’
Ibrahim, 13, is just one of millions of Nigerians displaced by the savage nine-year insurgency, which has claimed over 20,000 lives, triggered malnutrition and disease, and forced entire communities to flee their homes.
Now there is a growing fear that the African terror organisation – parts of which are affiliated to ISIS – is threatening to spill into Europe along migrant routes.
MailOnline visited the city of Maiduguri, the war-torn capital of northeastern Borno state, to see first-hand the scale of the disaster. We travelled with the British charity Street Child, one of a small number of NGOs that helps children caught up in the conflict.
Nigeria was the third biggest source of illegal migration into Europe last year with 37,000 new arrivals, behind only Syria and Afghanistan and ahead of Iraq by 10,000.
Last month, a hardened Boko Haram fighter who had admitted slaughtering schoolchildren, burning down churches and taking girls hostage, was arrested by German police in Munich.
So far, most Nigerian migrants have come from parts of the country free from the terrorist threat. But if the terror group is not suppressed, experts believe that a new surge in migration to Europe may be on the way – with more terrorists hiding in its ranks.
Fatima Akilu, a former NHS psychologist who leads Nigeria’s de-radicalisation programme, told MailOnline: ‘As Boko Haram gets squeezed in Nigeria by the military, what is the next stage? Embed themselves in other countries far from their homeland? That could be the plan.’
Maiduguri’s population has doubled to two million with an influx of people fleeing the group, which seeks to establish a caliphate in the northeast, as well as parts of neighbouring Cameroon, Chad and Niger.
In the city’s largest camp, Dalori, we captured drone footage to illustrate the magnitude of the staggering humanitarian emergency.
More than 50,000 traumatised refugees in the camp’s two sections could be seen living in fear and deprivation beside open sewers.
The camp is poorly defended and close to jihadi areas, making it a prime target for terrorists. Attacks take place with gruesome regularity.
Two weeks ago, a suicide bomber infiltrated the camp and killed five people, including a 60-year-old man and his nine-year-old son.
‘The refugees are living here in fear, like hunted animals,’ said head of security Baba Shehu, 51, who ferried the dead and wounded to hospital in a wheelbarrow in the aftermath of the atrocity.
Standing at the scene of the blast, Mr Shehu described how the horror unfolded. ‘A car pulled up at the gates and two women got out,’ he said. ‘When the security guards questioned them, they began to run.’
The first woman stumbled, he said, causing her bomb to detonate. It killed her but nobody else was hurt. The second attacker ran towards the camp.
‘We saw in the light of the explosion that she was climbing a pile of refuse, trying to get in,’ he said.
‘She jumped over the wall, rushed to a group of people and fell inside them. The bomb went off and her head flew upwards into a tree. There were bodies and screaming people everywhere.’
More than 626,000 displaced people live in 180 squalid camps like Dalori, with over 6,700 new arrivals in a week. Many of the younger generation have now begun to dream of a new life in Europe.
‘Of course the youth wants to leave here and go to the EU,’ said Abdul Hamid, a social worker in the Bakasi camp. ‘The only thing that stops them is the money.’
Last week, a village less than half a mile from the camp was razed to the ground by militants, leaving at least three dead and seven injured, as well as the loss of 57 homes.
This is business as usual in Maiduguri, which saw the highest concentration of fatalities in the country last year. In January, 12 people were killed and 48 injured in a double suicide bombing at the market downtown.
The streets are dotted with armoured cars which train their guns on thousands of yellow ‘KK’ tuk-tuks. Motorcycles, the terror group’s favoured method of transportation, have been banned and a defensive trench has been dug at the city’s edge. The push factors are obvious.
Children and young people, who are more likely to journey to Europe, have been particularly affected by the crisis. Boko Haram – which achieved international notoriety in 2014 when it kidnapped 276 Chibok girls – has been known to use those as young as five to carry out its brutal suicide attacks.
It is also known for its child soldiers. Youngsters who have escaped the group comprise some of the the most traumatised refugees in the camps.
Several former child jihadis in Bakasi camp gave a harrowing account of life inside the terror organisation, describing an Islamist cult of brainwashing, torture and beheadings.
Ibrahim, 13, was seized from his family at the age of nine and forced to read the Koran day after day for months while a boy of his own age beat him with the butt of an AK-47.
Eventually, he was given a gun of his own and welcomed into the terror group. Ironically, he was appointed jailer, replacing the boy who had beaten him so brutally before.
‘My mother was crying and crying when they took me,’ he said. ‘I never felt 100 per cent Boko Haram. Every night we went to sleep hungry and we pounded leaves to eat.’
He was rescued during a gunfight with a group of traditional hunters who have been fighting the jihadis.
‘They forced me to put down my AK,’ he said. ‘Then a man took my hand and I realised it was my father fighting for me and I was safe.’
Tragically, however, his relief was shortlived. ‘The shooting started again and my father was hit in the head,’ he said. ‘The bullet went into one temple and came out the other side. I saw him die.’
Ibrahim is part of a group of former Boko Haram members who are often shunned by society when they return, and are dreaming of a life in the West. There are about 300 such children and teenagers in the Bakasi camp, which has an overall population of 21,000.
Hassan, 15, had 21 siblings before the insurgency. Only five of them are alive today. His entire family was forcibly recruited by Boko Haram and after a period of brainwashing, he too became infatuated with the terror group.
‘I saw a lot of people getting killed but I was never selected for an operation,’ he said. ‘I wanted to be selected. It would give me pride, I loved it.
‘I liked the Amirs (leaders), I saw them as good people. I wanted them to like me so I would be selected for an operation.’
After two years, his father confided that he wanted to run away. Hassan decided to go with him, together with his brother, mother and aunt. The rest of the family refused.
They were pursued, however, by his 13-year-old cousin who caught them up on a bicycle. He shot the women dead, while the men – who were further up the road – managed to escape.
Experts fear that if these traumatised children find their way to Europe as migrants, they would be in serious danger of re-radicalisation.
‘This is absolutely a risk,’ said Fatima Akilu. ‘In Nigeria I run a comprehensive de-radicalisation programme that covers ideology, livelihood and education. But we don’t have the resources to reach many of the children in the camps, and they certainly wouldn’t get it in Europe.’
A major Nigerian military offensive codenamed Deep Punch pushed the terror group out of urban areas last year and won territorial gains.
In response, Boko Haram has ghosted into more remote locations and is focusing on soft targets, with an increased use of suicide bombs in Maiduguri.
Yet with an eye on the upcoming elections, the country’s president, Muhammadu Buhari, bizarrely declared that the terrorists had been ‘defeated’.
His words rang hollow on Wednesday, when Boko Haram released a 10-minute video of their leader, Abubakar Shekau, taunting the army and calling himself ‘invincible’. He also claimed to be holding wives of policemen as hostages.
Analysts agree that Boko Haram has indeed lost some ground. But contrary to Mr Buhari’s claims, BBC research shows that the number of people slaughtered by the jihadi organisation actually increased last year.
‘Every time the Nigerian government declares victory, it loses credibility,’ Grant T Harris, formerly President Obama’s senior adviser on Africa, told MailOnline.
‘Any claim that Boko Haram has been defeated is incredulous. The war will become all the more political in the run-up to the Nigerian election. In turn, Boko Haram will try to prove it is a salient and capable force by mounting fresh attacks.’
Mr Harris, now CEO of Harris Africa Partners, added: ‘I don’t see any quick resolution. We have a long way to go to truly cut off Boko Haram’s resources and stifle its recruitment. This can only be done with a humanitarian programme to encourage development alongside the military response.’
Some children displaced by Boko Haram have found their way into Islamic madrassas in the city, which teach them the Koran and send them out into the streets to beg.
Known as ‘Almajiri’ children – meaning ‘itinerant youngsters under Koranic instruction’ – they constitute the largest group of out-of-school children in Nigeria.
At the Goni Habeb Sangaya school in downtown Maiduguri, MailOnline visited a dirty, squalid and windowless room measuring about 15 sq ft which served as a bedroom for 20 child beggars.
‘Our children study the Koran for one-and-a-half hours, then we send them begging for two-and-a-half hours,’ said the head imam, Goni Usman, 50.
‘They have to pay for their tuition somehow. We used to have them farm during the rainy season to generate money for the school, but we have not been able to do this for seven years because of the conflict.’
Boko Haram has killed more than 2,295 teachers and displaced 19,000 since the insurgency began in 2009. When the new term began last September, more than 57 per cent of schools in Borno state remained closed.
According to the UN, over three million Nigerian children are in need of emergency education support. Street Child currently provides learning facilities for 23,000, in the hope that foreign aid efforts may help to some extent to alleviate the crisis.
The luckier children can be seen every day on the streets of Maiduguri in colourful school uniforms, and a few NGOs like Street Child are helping to provide an education to the most deprived children, including the Almajiri.
At the Jajeri Bayan Texaco school set up by the charity, hundreds of orphans and children who lost their parents as a result of the insurgency are provided with a Western-style education.
The school lies a short distance from the ruins of a house that belonged to the Boko Haram leader, Abubakar Shekau, who was using it to plan an attack when it was destroyed by the army.
Other initiatives are also in force, such as a seed finance programme that provides a small sum of money to female heads of families so that they can set up their own small businesses.
As things stand, however, both military and humanitarian resources are insufficient to remedy the huge crisis – which may soon arrive on Europe’s doorstep.
Last April, Nigeria’s chief humanitarian coordinator, Ayoade Alakija, warned: ‘The world could see a mass exodus from a country of 180million people if support is not given, and fast.’
Fatima Akilu agreed. ‘This is a strong possibility,’ she said.
‘At the moment, people still trust that the Government will resolve the problem. But if they lose all hope of returning to their homes, they may very well be triggered to leave.’
She added: ‘As Boko Haram comes under military pressure, it will no longer see itself as attached to Nigeria, but more connected to other parts of the world through ISIS.
‘We already know that Boko Haram cooperates with other groups and fights with ISIS in a variety of countries. Europe could be the logical next step.’
Islamist Boko Haram: Nigerian troops overpower insurgents in Sambisa forest, rescue 46
Troops of Operation LAFIYA DOLE have dislodged Boko Haram terrorists from one of their highly fortified hideouts around S-Shape part of the Sambisa forest in Borno State, like reported by dailypost.ng.
The exercise is part of their continued clearance operation against all known hideouts of Boko Haram terrorists within the large expanse of Sambisa forest.
Colonel Onyema Nwachukwu, Deputy Director Public Relations, Theatre Command Operation LAFIYA DOLE said The location was hitherto believed to be one of their prized locations.
“However, during a fierce offensive which was supported by Nigerian Air Force, against the terrorists on Monday 12th February 2018, the resilient troops neutralized quite a number of Boko Haram terrorists and captured major armaments, including 2 Spartan Armoured Personnel Carriers (APC), 1 Canter truck and 1 Laptop computer belonging to the insurgents.
“The gallant troops also destroyed 8 gun trucks, several makeshift accommodation and tents. Similarly, the troops rescued 19 women and 27 children from the erstwhile terrorists enclave. The highly motivated troops remain dauntless as the operation continues,” he said.
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