Attack on Damasak: Boko Haram targets aid workers and UN facilities in Nigeria

Relief and humanitarian aid workers in Nigeria are suffering
from an increase in the number of terrorist operations carried out by Boko
Haram against them, which increases the Nigerian authorities' concerns about
the expansion of the group, access to and control of these facilities, and
preventing food from reaching those who deserve it.
Damasak attack
In the same context, terrorists linked to Boko Haram, which
is affiliated with ISIS, attacked humanitarian facilities in the city of
Damasak in northeastern Nigeria.
According to AFP, the attack came late Saturday, April 11,
killing four people and wounding at least four others. This was the second
attack in two months against one of nine United Nations humanitarian bases in
the country.
“Armed men from the terrorist organization ISIS in West
Africa are still in Damasak, walking in the streets, firing bullets and setting
fire to humanitarian facilities,” said one of the humanitarian workers,
requesting anonymity.
Reason for the attack
Meanwhile, one of his colleagues said that the deliberate
shooting in the building of a non-governmental organization extended to the
United Nations base, which was destroyed, adding that the buildings of three
other non-governmental organizations were also destroyed.
A military source confirmed to AFP that the attackers who
tried to storm a military base in the city were contained thanks to air support
and then “were forced to withdraw” after fighting that lasted three hours.
“One soldier was killed and two others wounded,” the source
said, pointing to the destruction of five vehicles belonging to the attackers.
A source in a humanitarian organization indicated that three women were killed
when a projectile fell on a house during a wedding celebration.
The terrorists burned the home of a local leader, a medical
facility, an ambulance and a vehicle belonging to the humanitarian
organization, according to two sources.
“The brutal Saturday attack threatened our work and put the
lives of many aid workers at risk,” said Eric Patton, director of the council
in Nigeria.
“Fortunately, our five Damasak township employees escaped
unharmed; however, the perpetrators managed to set our guesthouse on fire and
destroy life-saving relief supplies, including vehicles used to deliver aid,”
Patton said.
“Besides the humanitarian facilities, they also attacked a
police station and a hospital where they seized medical supplies,” said Musa
Kolo, a member of the town’s community.
Kolo added that he believed the attackers had returned to
their forest with the equipment and food they had looted.
On March 1, armed Boko Haram elements targeted the Dikwa
area in Borno State, killing six civilians and deliberately targeting
humanitarian facilities, according to the United Nations.
Blood history
The most violent terrorist group in Africa appeared at the
beginning of 2000 and was initially just a group that claimed to promote virtue
and forbid vice, but over time it transformed into opposing state policies, in
light of the rampant corruption in Nigeria.
In 2009, Boko Haram declared its rebellion, taking up arms
and adopting a violent approach. Since then, they have caused the deaths of
more than 27,000 people and the displacement of more than 1.8 million Nigerian
citizens from the areas of violence.
In 2015, Boko Haram announced its pledge of allegiance to
ISIS and expanded its geographical operations to include the countries of West
Africa overlooking Lake Chad, after it had been limited to the Muslim states of
northern Nigeria such as Borno. In the same year, the organization launched
bloody attacks in northern Cameroon and carried out kidnappings, prompting UN
Secretary-General Antonio Guterres to express his grave concern about the
kidnappings.
The year 2016 witnessed a defection from that pledge as a
result of tactical differences in operations between the leaders of the
organization, which resulted in a split, the dismissal of Abubakar Shekau from
the group’s leadership, and the appointment of Abu Musab al-Barnawi as its
leader. But Shekau succeeded in establishing another group in the area that
bears the old name of Boko Haram, Jama’at Ahl as-Sunnah lid-Da'wah wa'l-Jihad.