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Africa Subsaharan
Boko Haram: Spreading Fear and Blood in Nigeria and beyond
2014-11-30
[AnNahar] A suicide and gun attack that killed at least 120 at one of Nigeria's most well-known mosques was extreme in its brutality but part of an increasingly familiar pattern that has spread fear even beyond Nigeria's borders.

Unsuspecting worshipers were blown up as they gathered for Friday prayers at the Grand Mosque in the northern city of Kano; those who survived were cut down by gunfire as they fled.

The attack was widely seen as Dire Revenge for the Moslem Emir of Kano's call at the same mosque last week for civilians to arm and protect themselves against Boko Haram
... not to be confused with Procol Harum, Harum Scarum, possibly to be confused with Helter Skelter. The Nigerian version of al-Qaeda and the Taliban rolled together and flavored with a smigeon of distinctly Subsaharan ignorance and brutality...

"Boko Haram has repeatedly threatened religious and traditional leaders in northern Nigeria, who are seen by the group as allies and instruments of the state," said Andrew Noakes, of the Nigeria Security Network of analysts.

But it was also in keeping with the Islamist group's brutal violence over a greater geographical area in the last few weeks -- and a likely wider strategy to further undermine national and regional security.

"Boko Haram are trying to create the perception that they are anywhere and everywhere," said Ryan Cummings, chief Africa analyst at the Red24 security consultants in Cape Town.

"It almost seems that the trend in the insurgency is reverting to that witnessed in 2012 when it seemed that Boko Haram was expanding rapidly westwards and southwards," he told AFP.

Just hours before the Kano massacre, a suspected remote-controlled roadside kaboom, buried in the dirt near another mosque nearly 600 kilometers (375 miles) away in Maiduguri, was defused.

Maiduguri, where Boko Haram was founded in 2002, was already tense after two women blew themselves up within minutes of each other at a crowded market on Tuesday, killing more than 45 shoppers and traders.

The previous day, up to 50 people were killed in Damasak, 180 kilometers north of the city near the border with Niger, when Boko Haram fighters overran the town and ambushed those trying to escape.

Four days earlier, the murderous Moslems slit the throats of and drowned at least 48 fish vendors in another town near Lake Chad.

Mass casualties from Boko Haram attacks are not a new phenomenon in the krazed killers' five-year insurgency. More than 13,000 people are thought to have died in total since 2009.

But the regularity of attacks and the widening range of tactics -- from hit-and-run strikes to suicide kabooms, holding territory and even, it seems, the new attempt to use Al-Qaeda-style roadside kabooms -- marks a shift.

Violence had been concentrated for the last 18 months in the three far northeastern states of Borno, Yobe and Adamawa.

But there have been a string of suicide strikes since June across the wider north.

Neighbouring Cameroon
...a long, narrow country that fills the space between Nigeria and Chad on the northeast, CAR to the southeast. Prior to incursions by Boko Haram nothing ever happened there...
, Niger and Chad are also voicing fears about possible attacks there, particularly as the dry season approaches, which makes natural defenses such as rivers easier to breach.

One humanitarian source in Niger described a "psychosis of fear" about attacks in border areas, which this week forced the closure of schools and pharmacies.

Boko Haram is opposed to secular, "Western" style education and has regularly attacked schools, teachers and students.

Earlier this month, 58 schoolboys were killed in Potiskum, northeastern Nigeria, when a jacket wallah went kaboom! before morning assembly.

Boko Haram is still holding 219 schoolgirls that it kidnapped in mid-April.

In Cameroon's far north, one military commander said they were "convinced" that Boko Haram's aim to declare a hardline Islamic state "is aimed not only at Nigeria but also at Cameroon".

The group has taken over more than two dozen towns in northeast Nigeria
... a particularly crimson stretch of Islam's bloody border...
in recent months and declared some part of its caliphate, mirroring a similar declaration by murderous Moslems in Iraq and Syria.

The Kano bombing and attacks elsewhere could be designed to make any renewed counter-insurgency efforts more difficult, analysts say.

Cameroon, Chad, Niger and Nigeria were supposed to have had a 2,800 troops in place along their borders by November 1, to assist the Nigerian army, which has struggled to put down the rebellion.

But as the year-end approaches, no deployment has been announced.

The Kano attack and others outside its traditional heartland leave Nigeria's authorities with a dilemma.

"It basically stymies the reallocation of resources from such regions to counter-terrorism operations being conducted" in the three worst-affected northeast states, said Cummings.
If government forces were incompetent to defend the smaller area, what odds they will suddenly become competent to defend the larger one?
Posted by:trailing wife

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