Boko Haram in Chad: Six years of war and terrorism

Africa is still the focus of terrorist groups, as the continent has become a home for those fleeing the collapse of the alleged caliphate of ISIS in Syria and Iraq and a haven for terrorists fleeing prosecution in Libya, in addition to those aspiring to establish an organizational force on the ground.
On the shores of Lake Chad, which serves as the headquarters
of the pro-ISIS group Boko Haram, rivers of blood continue to flow, with the
increase in the rate of terrorist operations and casualties of the war with
rebels and armed groups, which just days ago claimed the life of Chadian
President Idriss Deby.
Boko Haram, which originated in Nigeria in 2009, has taken
its bases on small islands spread in Lake Chad, which is surrounded by Nigeria,
Chad, Niger and Cameroon, as part of the transfer of terrorist activity to
neighboring countries, inflicting escalating losses in lives and money.
For years, Chad has faced the armed group that mainly
targets the army, while the international presence through the counterterrorism
coalition in the region has failed to reduce the attacks and their intensity.
The Chadian capital, N'Djamena, includes the headquarters of
the French Operation Barkhane, which was launched in 2014, with a French
presence almost permanently in the former colony.
Chad is also part of the five-nation force for the Sahel
region, with Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger and Mauritania, and a joint
multinational force backed by Westerners that includes Nigeria and Cameroon.
Amid this momentum in the fight against terrorism, Chadian
President Idriss Deby, whose death was announced on Tuesday, April 20, decided
to stop the participation of his country's army in military operations outside
Chad’s borders.
In official statements, Deby said, “Our soldiers are dying
for the sake of Lake Chad and the Sahel. As of today, no Chadian soldier will
participate in a military operation outside Chad.”
The Chadian army, which is considered one of the most effective
armies in the region, is active alongside the joint force formed in 2015 with
the other three countries bordering the lake (Nigeria, Cameroon and Niger).
The Chadian army also works within the alliance of the five
Sahel countries against terrorists targeting Mali, Niger and Burkina Faso, and
accordingly is considered an important ally of France’s Operation Barkhane in
the region.
The extent of the war between terrorists and the Chadian
government reached the point that, in March 2020, the Chadian authorities
declared two provinces near Lake Chad a "war zone", a measure that
gives local authorities more influence to respond to terrorism.
The war between the Chadian army and Boko Haram has
continued along Lake Chad since 2015.
In addition to terrorism, the country is also witnessing a
conflict between different groups of farmers and livestock keepers in the
provinces of Ouaddai and Sila in the east, and the Chadian army is also facing
rebels and gold prospectors in Mount Tibesti in the north and on the border
with Libya.