Since 2014, several communities in some of the states in the Northwest of Nigeria have witnessed aggravated plunder and killings. Nigerians and non-Nigerians have been massacred in unrestrained orgy within these locations.
From Kaduna to Sokoto, Katsina to Zamfara and Kebbi, it has been a cauldron of beastly killings.
In the run-up to the 2015 general elections, Zamfara state became the epicentre of the daily horror. The killings soon spread to Katsina state with some intensity.
Also across the state boundaries, Niger State in the North Central zone witnessed similar attacks.
By 2019, the savagery reached a crescendo with the erstwhile Governor of Zamfara, Abdulaziz Abubakar Yari confessing that he had lost control of the state. What started as rural banditry in which poor farmers lost their flock to rustlers soon attained a frightening scale.
Seemingly indifferent to giving adequate heed to any careful mapping of the phenomenon, security agencies and political office holders have tended to casually pin the label of banditry on this steady insurrection against the state.
Of course, there are elements of banditry but a more sinister, underlying offshoot has evidently emerged.
It is, arguably, in the light of the faulty contextualization of the problem that state governments began to negotiate with these criminal groups.
To be sure, there are a few dissimilarities between the context of the insecurity in the Northeast and that of the Northwest.
In the Northeast, there are groups with Islamic extremist religious orientation. There is also in the Northeast a recognizable, charismatic authority figure in the person of Abubakar Shekau. In effect, all the terror groups in the Northeast fight under the Islamic Jihadist banner
In the Northwest, there are several violent groups but only one, Ansaru, fights under any banner of Islamic Jihadist motivation.
Other violent groups, lacking the pull of religious doctrine and the character of a maverick leader, have not been any less ruthless.
The groups in the Northwest, not bearing any legacy names by which they might project their mission, have ceded to the public the liberty to address them as they wished.
Perhaps, seeking to overlook the scale of the horror inflicted continually on society by these groups, the state appears satisfied to use their non-religious characterization as cover to continually describe them as “bandits.”
It no longer makes sense to continually categorize these groups as “bandits.” In the ranking of criminal enterprises against a state, banditry features at a level comparable to robbery.
This is why public enquiry, definition and categorization should matter a great deal.
In the matrix of criminality, terrorism is on a different level because it is an insurrection, even much more than that, it is the use of arms against the authority of the state.
The warlords in the Northwest have steadfastly followed these paths.
Terrorism is never exclusively driven by religious (Jihadist) fervour. Most of the violent groups in the Northwest are not primarily driven by extremist Jihadist convictions yet they are not any less into terrorism than Ansaru, Boko Haram or the Islamic State West Africa Province
Nigeria’s Terror King, Shekau, Connects East, West And Centre In A Puzzling Agenda
Published on July 12, 2020
[THREAD]
Scorned and underrated, Abubakar Shekau, the leader of #BokoHaram is currently pulling a massive stealth strategy in an organisational makeover destined to connect the northeast, the north-west and the north-central in a bewildering expansionist agenda.
Defined by welcoming former apostates; engaging in factional reconciliations; admitting of modest ideological shifts; and proposing a balanced role for clerics and combatants in his group,
Boko Haram has confirmed that it was responsible for the abduction of over 300 students from Kankara, Katsina State, last Friday, and says it has yet to declare the conditions for their release, contrary to reports.
The terror group’s leader, Abubakar Shekau, stated this in a 4:28 long recording released in the wee hours of Tuesday and obtained by #HumAngle.
Abductors Of Kankara Students Finally Communicate Demands
[THREAD]
The abductors of hundreds of schoolboys in Kankara community, Katsina State, northwest Nigeria, have made first contact with a set of demands, according to the state governor, Aminu Masari.
The governor disclosed this on Monday during a visit to President Muhammadu Buhari’s family home in Daura.
Over 300 schoolboys were missing after a group of armed men attacked Government Science Secondary School Kankara Local Government Area on Friday night.
Nigeria Deploys Air, Ground Forces In Search Of Abducted School Boys
[THREAD]
Nigerian Army has deployed ground and aerial forces in search of the secondary school boys abducted Friday night by some terrorists from their school, the Government Science Secondary School in Kankara
Local Government Area of Katsina State, northwest Nigeria, according to Garba Shehu, the presidential spokesperson.
The Nigerian Air Force, a few years ago commissioned the 213 Forward Operating Base (FOB) in Katsina and the Quick Response Wing (QRW) Daura.
Breaking: Dozens Of Secondary School Students Kidnapped In Katsina
[THREAD]
Armed men on Friday night invaded Government Science Secondary School in Kankara Local Government Area of Katsina State, northwest Nigeria and kidnapped dozens of students.
The attack on the school and environs started at about 11 pm and lasted for over two hours. An undisclosed number of students and residents of the town were declared missing after the raid.
ICC To Investigate Boko Haram, Nigerian Military For War Crimes
[THREAD]
The International Criminal Court (ICC) has confirmed plans to investigate Boko Haram factions and the military in Nigeria for war crimes and crimes against humanity.
The ICC made this announcement in a statement released on Friday evening. HumAngle had reported correctly hours earlier that the international tribunal planned to take additional steps in ensuring victims of war crimes got justice in the country.