Nigerian army strikes Boko Haram
Nigeria is suffering from a state of insecurity as a result of the increase in the terrorist
operations by Boko Haram, which led to the outbreak of widespread violence
despite the Nigerian government's efforts to develop a policy to combat
terrorism and the deployment of security forces.
Since the emergence of Boko Haram in the mid-1990s, the
group has gained territory and influence throughout the northern part of
Nigeria, where it has committed numerous acts of violence against the state and
society.
In the same context, on June 6, an air operation led by
Nigerian intelligence targeted the elements of the terrorist group and its
strategic material capabilities in the Ali Ngulde camp in the northeastern
Mandara Mountains.
As a result of the operation, dozens of terrorists were
killed, and others fled through the mountains scattered in the region, as the
planes destroyed a house where Boko Haram leader Ali Ngulde and other leaders
of the movement were hiding.
The joint air and ground attack came a few hours after
similar strikes were carried out on an ISIS convoy in West Africa, killing
several terrorists and destroying two trucks.
Since the Boko Haram rebellion began in 2009, more than
40,000 people have been killed and more than two million people have been
displaced in Nigeria, which is experiencing a serious humanitarian crisis,
according to the United Nations.
Hesham El-Naggar, a researcher of terrorist groups, said
that Boko Haram has been severely suffering and growing weak over the past
three years.
Naggar confirmed in an exclusive statement to the Reference
that there are several reasons for this decline. The first is the progress and
achievement made by the Nigerian authorities and agencies in the context of
weakening the structure of these organizations and the success in splitting
their ranks, absorbing the fugitives, and containing them intellectually and
socially.
He added that these factors lead to the infiltration of
large numbers of members of extremist organizations to return to the bosom of
the homeland, where they found that these practices are not consistent with the
correct teachings of religion.
The second matter is the occurrence of fighting and bloody
conflict between Boko Haram, which is the branch of al-Qaeda, and the ISIS
branch in West Africa, which culminated in the killing of Boko Haram leader Abubakr
Shekau after he blew himself up during a clash between him and a group of ISIS
elements who came to arrest him.
Naggar pointed out that this infighting made many members of
the two groups flee from them and return to the bosom of the state, in addition
to the fact that their fighting and the continuous bloody conflict between them
contributed to weakening them both, while the Nigerian security services
benefited from one of them eliminating the other.