Nigerian Muslim Clerics Recruiting, Gov’t Officials Take Bribes From Boko Haram – US Military Report
The Nigerian Muslim clerics living
in the border towns of Cameroon and Nigeria are recruiting Boko Haram members
in their mosques, the government of Cameroon has alleged. Worse still, government
officials in the North East states of Yobe, Borno and Adamawa collaborate with
the terrorists and take bribes from them, thereby, hindering the fight against
the terrorists. Governors of these states also capitalise on their civilian
fears to berate the army and the federal government.
These allegations were published in
a report, yesterday, by US-based online military news agency, StrategyPage. The
magazine explains that the army wants governors in the affected states removed
because “many officials in those states are cooperating with Boko Haram (to
avoid attack) and are taking bribes from the Islamic terrorists.
“Some of these officials are
covering themselves in case Boko Haram should gain power and the governors are
often just responding to civilian fears of army misconduct,” it noted.
The magazine said: “Cameroon is also
concerned about pro-Boko Haram clerics from Nigeria quietly preaching and
recruiting for Boko Haram in Cameroon mosques.
“Islamic conservative clergy are not
unusual on either side of the border, but those who do not denounce Boko Haram
are suspected of quietly recruiting young men to join the “jihad” (struggle)
and fight (and often die) in Nigeria. These preachers have to recruit quietly
because otherwise police in Cameroon will arrest and deport them, sometimes
after a vigorous interrogation. Evidence of this recruiting is showing up when
some of the recruits return from Nigeria with tales of disillusionment and
adversity while with Boko Haram,” the report said.
The magazine said that the Cameroonian
government is “being criticized because recent claims of large (over 5,000
weapons) arms seizures near the Nigerian border could not be verified by
reporters. Civilians living in villages near where the government said the
seizures took place said they saw nothing. The government responded that the
smugglers operated in remote areas and avoided civilians as well as security
forces. There are also concerns that even if weapons were seized they would, as
often happens, be sold back to black market arms dealers so that government
officials could keep the cash.”
On the military, the report said:
“Residents of those three states have justifiable complaints about the army, in
particular the casual attitude of the military towards the safety of civilians
and their property.
“The army is also unreliable when it
comes to sharing information on casualties. Thus Boko Haram related deaths so
far this year are believed to be (based on local reports) at least 1,500, which
is 50 per cent more than what the army reports. Boko Haram related deaths from
2010 to 2013 were about 3,600, so the violence is not declining.
“The government has been saying, for
several years, that Boko Haram would be crushed within a year and never
happens. More insightful observers point out that the problem is mainly one of
corruption and poverty, as well as the appeal of Islamic radicalism as a
magical cure. All of Nigeria suffers from corruption.
“Poverty is more prevalent in the
Muslim north, in part because of climate. That’s because the semi-desert Sahel
region south of the Sahara Desert is found in the north. Another problem is the
more conservative nature of Islamic populations and the lower education
levels.”
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