Boko Haram prime beneficiary of Turkish interference in Libya
Boko Haram is staging a new wave of attacks in Sahel countries, capitalizing on the world's preoccupation with the fight against the coronavirus and rampant turmoil in Libya.
The terrorist
group is trying to rebuild itself by deploying its militants along the Komadugu River which
flows into Lake Chad and separates Chad from Nigeria.
Boko Haram
just tries to get enough stocks of food and arms before the river flooding.
Benefiting
from crises
Boko Haram
tends to downplay the effect of the crackdown of the militaries of the region
on it. It mocked the measures taken by the government of Niger to curb the
spread of the coronavirus. It said none of its militants had contracted the virus,
whereas it is rampant among the peoples and the governments of the region.
The terrorist
group also works to benefit from the coronavirus by recruiting more youth. This
is especially true after over 1,000 of its militants had been killed in
confrontations with the Chadian.
The group is
also deploying its militants near Lake Chad which is located in close proximity
to passageways used in the smuggling of arms, oil, gold and humans.
This coincides
with Turkish interference in Libya. In 2019, AFP ran a report about the 2017
seizure of a shipment of Turkish arms that was being sent to Boko Haram in
Nigeria.
According to
intelligence reports, dealings between smuggling networks and radical groups
operating in the Sahel region is easier now, given Turkish interference in
Libya.




