Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,162,924 members, 7,852,108 topics. Date: Thursday, 06 June 2024 at 12:47 PM

Kuje Prison Attack Shows Boko Haram-bandits Merger - Farooq - Politics - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / Kuje Prison Attack Shows Boko Haram-bandits Merger - Farooq (202 Views)

Red Cross' Iron Doors Saved Abba Kyari From Death During Kuje Prison Attack / ISWAP Claims Responsibility For Kuje Prison Attack, Releases Video / Several Escaped Inmates From Kuje Prison Attack Recaptured (Photos) (2) (3) (4)

(1) (Reply) (Go Down)

Kuje Prison Attack Shows Boko Haram-bandits Merger - Farooq by Racoon(m): 1:58pm On Jul 09, 2022
By Farooq A. Kperogi

Twitter: @farooqkperogi

This week’s notes are from Atlanta because I am on summer vacation with my family until the end of the weekend. Although I have, for the most part, unplugged, and only casually surveil social media for a few minutes to get a sense of what’s happening in the world, news of the July 5 terrorist attack on Kuje Prison in Abuja hit me and interfered with my self-imposed moratorium on scanning political news.


The attack worries me because I think it represents a worse omen than most people realize. In many ways, it symbolizes the crystallization of the merger between Boko Haram and “bandits” that many people, including the Sultan of Sokoto, had feared, as I’ll show later.

Although the dominant faction of Boko Haram now known as ISWAP ( or the Islamic State's West Africa Province) has claimed responsibility for the attack (and showed video proof of this), a July 6 report by Foundation for Investigative Journalism revealed that the attackers “preached in Ebira, [Fulfulde] and Hausa.”

The video that ISWAP released also contains a medley of northern Nigerian accents. Since Boko Haram used to be mostly identified with the Kanuri people of Borno and Yobe states and nihilistic banditry with the Fulani, the Kuje attack signals a dangerously seamless merger of Boko Haram, bandits and other extremist elements. This may be the beginning of the Afghanistanization of Northern Nigeria.

People used to wonder if “bandits”— or what the news media call “Fulani herdsmen” when they inflict terror in non-Muslim parts of Nigeria— are actually Boko Haram elements who have transmuted into a different identity.

This thinking was fueled by the incidences of the abduction of school children in the North by so-called bandits. That’s Boko Haram’s signature mode of operation. Although “bandits” used abducted children as a bargaining chip in negotiations for ransom, the abductions also have a chilling effect on the enrollment of northern Nigerian children in Western schools, which is Boko Haram’s ultimate goal.

In a think piece I wrote for a European human rights organization in 2021, I’d argued that Boko Haram and “bandits”—or “Fulani herdsmen”— are different people.

“Most Boko Haram members come from the Kanuri ethnic group. The Kanuri and the Fulani are not only completely different people, they are also—or used to be— ‘historical enemies,’ or what Frederick Lugard called ‘hereditary rivals’,” I wrote.

Kanuris resisted Sheikh Usman Dan Fodio's 19th-century Jihad that sought to reform Islam where it already existed. The Kanuri people have been Muslims since the 9th century, that is, about one thousand two hundred years ago, making them one of the earliest people in Africa to embrace Islam. At the time of the jihad, their society had been Muslim for about one thousand years. They had no use for Dan Fodio's "reform."

The tensile stress that the Kanem-Borno Empire’s repudiation of Dan Fodio’s jihad actuated has been somewhat resolved through a ritualized joking relationship between the Kanuri and the Fulani: they now call each other "slaves" in lighthearted jest.

But although Muslim northern Nigeria is emerging as an ethnogenesis, i.e., a new ethnic identity forged from a mishmash of multiple identities but glued by Islam, Kanuri people still take pride in having a political identity that is independent of the Fulani-inflected caliphate in Northern Nigeria.

I didn’t think there would be a basis for Boko Haram and “bandits” to find a common ground and coalesce. But there’s emerging evidence that that is now happening.

The attack on Kuje prison adds to the frighteningly mounting evidence that Boko Haram is succeeding in enlisting the support of “bandits” to spread terror, weaken or extirpate Western education, and ultimately take over northern Nigeria and impose their understanding of Muslim theocracy on the people.

The Sultan of Sokoto, a descendant of Usman Dan Fodio, was the first to call attention to the probable fusion of Boko Haram and “bandits” in the aftermath of two mass abductions of schoolchildren in Katsina and Niger states by “bandits” last year.

“Make no mistake: the abduction is a classic example of the philosophical foundation of Boko Haram— that western education is forbidden,” the Guardian of February 20, 2021, quoted the Sultan as saying. “That’s why their targets are always on boarding schools, especially science schools, considered atheistic in pedagogy.”

Sahara Reporters also reported on March 25, 2021, that Boko Haram had begun to train and arm “Fulani herdsmen.”

There is a massive trove of anecdotal evidence that “bandits” are not religious. The motivation for their banditry is clearly mostly pecuniary and other times just plain nihilistic vengeance, but they are amenable to persuasion by Boko Haram to seek “divine reward” for their violence.

Now, the evidence before us appears to indicate that Boko Haram’s ideologically situated violence is finding common grounds with “bandits’” nihilistic and mercenary violence. This doesn’t bode well for Nigeria

This is particularly troubling because Buhari and his security chiefs who should be worried by this, who have the instruments of legal violence, don’t care because they think it doesn’t affect them directly.

The clearest indication that they don’t care is evident in the fact that no one, as usual, has lost their job over this embarrassing failure of elementary security.


Buhari, who is supposed to be commander-in-chief of the armed forces and chief security officer of the country, merely expressed his standard, obligatory, and predictable shock, sadness, and disappointment; caused his media aides to post a clueless tweet that wondered “How terrorists [can] organize, have weapons, attack a security installation and get away with it?''; and then fled the country a mere 23 hours later.

This sort of blithe, laissez faire attitude to security has been the trademark of the Buhari regime since 2015. Even the lull in Boko Haram’s murderous fury between 2016 and 2018 for which the regime and its apologists took credit was just a flash in the pan. It had no connection with what the regime did.

I called attention to this in my February 24, 2018, column titled "Bursting the Myth of Buhari’s Boko Haram 'Success'." I gave reasons for the weakening of the Boko Haram terrorism and pointed out that the government had nothing to do with it.

“Boko Haram has been weakened by an enervatingly bitter and sanguinary internal schism. Since at least September 2016, the Abubakar Shekau and Abu Musab al-Barnawi factions of Boko Haram have killed each other more than the military has killed them,” I wrote.


This got the hackles of many Buhari apologists up, which caused them to launch personal attacks on me. Well, months later, Boko Haram resumed their attacks on the usual targets. Then the narrative changed.

The government and its defenders said unlike in the past, Boko Haram’s mass murders were now limited to the Northeast and that they were mostly only on “soft targets,” which is euphemism for poor, everyday folks.

Well, Boko Haram and bandits have now banded together and have a wider sphere of operation than they ever did before Buhari came to power. They now operate not just in the northeast, the northwest and the northcentral, they now carry out operations in the heart of Abuja unchallenged like during Goodluck Jonathan’s time.

They have murdered hundreds of soldiers in Borno and Yobe and even attacked and abducted military officers at the Nigerian Defence Academy in Kaduna in August 2021.

As Senator Shehu Sani said on Twitter, “THE Attacks on military formations, Police Stations, Prisons, Election commission offices are attacks on symbols, institutions and pillars of the state. They are not soft targets. The nation is at war with multiples of organised guerrilla terror groups aiming at power. WE NEED A LEADER!”


Even Buhari’s own convoy was ambushed and attacked by “bandits” in his home state of Katsina a few days ago, which led to the loss of at least two lives and severe injuries to several others. Yet no one has been arrested, and no one has lost his job. In fact, the Daily Trust of July 7 reported that “security agents in the convoy did not exchange fire with the terrorists; hence the assailants escaped unhurt.”

But an air force fighter jet later “mistakenly” dropped a bomb on poor villagers while looking for the “bandits” that Buhari’s security operatives refused to exchange fire with.

At this rate, “Boko bandits” can attack and overrun the Presidential Villa with little or no resistance. Maybe that is when Buhari will care. I hope it won’t be late by then.
https://www.farooqkperogi.com/2022/07/kuje-prison-attack-shows-boko-haram.html?m=1

https://www./63277488504/permalink/10159142502478505/

Re: Kuje Prison Attack Shows Boko Haram-bandits Merger - Farooq by Jostoman: 2:00pm On Jul 09, 2022
You guys should stop deceiving yourselves there is nothing like bandit those guys are Boko Haram or Iswap terrorist they only remove their terrorist tag by changing stylishly change their name to bandit.

Concerning kuje prison break, how can about 200 terrorist drove all the way from Forest to a city to attack prison without any challenge or resistance from our security agent. Nigerians should keep enjoying the movie they are acting for them free of charge.
Re: Kuje Prison Attack Shows Boko Haram-bandits Merger - Farooq by Nobody: 2:03pm On Jul 09, 2022
Kind of old news by now. One American journalist did an extensive article on the matter last year....so we can see the danger.

All in all, the end result of Nigerian governments doing the same thing over and over again. Governments of sharing the money, instead of using what we have to make things that would benefit the world.

That is why we are in this mess.....whether North or South and why we have violence all over the place.

And many APC supporters don't get that when you were voted for change...ye better mean it.
Re: Kuje Prison Attack Shows Boko Haram-bandits Merger - Farooq by Racoon(m): 2:05pm On Jul 09, 2022
Nothing new. Both the so called bandits have long been Boko Haram fanatics disguising but the govt of the gave them the soft appellation in order to conceal their real devilish intentions. After all, they were even begging journalists not to tag bandits as terrorists
Re: Kuje Prison Attack Shows Boko Haram-bandits Merger - Farooq by Racoon(m): 2:07pm On Jul 09, 2022
Buhari, who is supposed to be commander-in-chief of the armed forces and chief security officer of the country, merely expressed his standard, obligatory, and predictable shock, sadness, and disappointment; caused his media aides to post a clueless tweet that wondered “How terrorists [can] organize, have weapons, attack a security installation and get away with it?''; and then fled the country a mere 23 hours later.
This is the same man that said "a fight against the Boko Haram Islamic terrorists is a fight against the north."
Re: Kuje Prison Attack Shows Boko Haram-bandits Merger - Farooq by treesun: 2:09pm On Jul 09, 2022
Racoon:

https://www.farooqkperogi.com/2022/07/kuje-prison-attack-shows-boko-haram.html?m=1

https://www./63277488504/permalink/10159142502478505/

And insensitive APC wants to give us Muslim-Muslim ticket, will MURIC agreed to this nonsense. Religion matters in a polarized country like Nigeria. Imagine Elrufai or Shetima as our VP. Bandits will get budget allocation!
Buhari silence emboldened Boko haram and bandits!

1 Like

Re: Kuje Prison Attack Shows Boko Haram-bandits Merger - Farooq by Nobody: 2:10pm On Jul 09, 2022
The solution to this problem is simple.

Make education valuable...by Nigeria becoming an actively exporting manufacturing society.

There would be enough jobs for all, and no idle hands for criminal elements, plus we would earn a lot of money to fund a decent security apparatus.

Not this our economy where we share oil money all the time.

But we make the same mistake over and over again...leaders and followers, by thinking the problem is how we share the money. It isn't....it is how we make the money.....and yes, fighting corruption does not wholly answer the question.
Re: Kuje Prison Attack Shows Boko Haram-bandits Merger - Farooq by Racoon(m): 2:13pm On Jul 09, 2022
Meanwhile, here is the government via the legendary Lai Mohammed rationalising the atrocities of these same treasonable "Bandits" cum terrorists:

".....“The difference between IPOB, Boko Haram on one side and bandits is that, while IPOB and Boko Haram are driven by ideology, a belief that they don’t want to be part Nigeria, bandits have no flags.

“Bandits have no flag. Bandits are simple criminals. There’s no difference between bandits and other criminals other than their ferocity,” the minister said. “Bandits have never said they don’t believe in Nigeria, they are just pure criminals,”
http://saharareporters.com/2021/10/18/bandits-have-no-flags-boko-haram-ipob-they-are-simple-criminals%E2%80%94-buhari%E2%80%99s-minister-lai
Re: Kuje Prison Attack Shows Boko Haram-bandits Merger - Farooq by Totilopussylick(m): 2:19pm On Jul 09, 2022
Long story
Re: Kuje Prison Attack Shows Boko Haram-bandits Merger - Farooq by chatinent: 2:46pm On Jul 09, 2022
We know already.

It's only the FG that's dividing it to make one inferior to the other.
Re: Kuje Prison Attack Shows Boko Haram-bandits Merger - Farooq by ExplorerReturns(m): 3:28pm On Jul 09, 2022
There is nothing like bandits. Bandits are simply boko Haram located in North West and north Central
Re: Kuje Prison Attack Shows Boko Haram-bandits Merger - Farooq by Kingspin(m): 3:49pm On Jul 09, 2022
Are u a learner?

Boko haram, bandits, Fulani herdsmen, and the mobs that killed Deborah are ONE people. Other merged groups include security agencies and politicians.

(1) (Reply)

WATCH: The Sad Ordeal Of One Of The Multiple Endsars Victim. / Insecurity: Get Licensed Guns, Protect Yourselves, Archbishop Tells Nigerians / Ambassador Frank Nchita Ogbuewu: A Senator We Shall Be Proud To Call Ours

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 33
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.