Islamic State launching yet new attacks in Nigeria

A group of militants affiliated to the Islamic State has overrun a military base in northeastern Nigeria.
This came after Nigerian President
Muhammadu Buhari changed some senior army officers and commanders.
The Nigerian army also said it had
succeeded in liberating a village captured last week by the terrorists.
Islamic State terrorists attacked
a village in Borno State on 19 February, where the Super Camp military base is
located.
A Nigerian military source said
the militants attacked the base from the northern and southern sides.
They forced troops in the base to
retreat, Agence France-Presse quoted the source as saying.
President Buhari made new
appointments within the ranks of the army earlier in February.
The appointments, observers said,
are a new attempt by the Nigerian president to infuse new blood into the army
command.
Theft
The Islamic State is present in a
number of areas across Nigeria. It depends on theft and looting to finance its
operations in that African country. The terrorist organization also kills its
opponents, regardless of their age.
The organization especially
depends on the theft of sheep and looting commercial shops. It also steals
furniture and electric appliances from the homes of ordinary Nigerians.
Growing attacks
According to a new report by the
International Crisis Group, the Islamic State staged a large number of bloody
attacks across Nigeria in 2019, especially in July.
An attack on a funeral procession
by Islamic State militants in this month caused 65 people to die.
The United Nations condemned the attack.