Expansion of Boko Haram’s activity outside of Nigeria
Since emerging in Borno State in North East Nigeria
in 2009, the vast majority of Boko Haram’s violent activities have been
concentrated in Nigeria.
In the ten years the group has been active, more
than 70% of violent events associated with the group and 80% of the associated
reported fatalities have taken place in Nigeria.
This pattern appears to be shifting in 2019, as more
of Boko Haram’s violent activities are occurring outside of Nigeria. In 2019 to
date, only half (50.4%) of violent activities associated with Boko Haram (both
the Shekau and Barnawi factions) have been in Nigeria.
Unlike
previous instances in which Boko Haram engaged in significant activity outside
of Nigeria, the 2019 expansion of Boko Haram’s violent activities into
neighboring countries, and the types of violence it is engaging in, allude to a
resilient and resourceful insurgency.
Increasing violence associated with Boko Haram in
Niger, Chad, and Cameroon has dire implications for the humanitarian crisis in
the Lake Chad Basin and stabilization efforts in the region.
Boko Haram first expanded outside of Nigeria in
2012, when it was involved in two violent events in Cameroon and Chad.
The event in Chad was a skirmish between Nigerian
military forces and militants involved in a smuggling operation; the event in
Cameroon was an attack launched by the militants on a border town in which no
Cameroonian nationals were among the 15 reported fatalities.
Nigerians
remained the primary opponents in these events. By 2013, however, these
cross-border operations were focused on non-Nigerian targets; in June 2013, for
example, Boko Haram militants attacked a prison in Niamey, Niger, which
resulted in three reported fatalities and three injured prison guards.
Though Boko
Haram has continuously engaged in cross-border operations since 2012, the
majority of violent events involving the group (nearly 72%) and associated
reported fatalities (81%) have remained in Nigeria.
As Boko Haram has continued to engage in operations
in Chad, Cameroon, and Niger, different patterns of violence have developed in
each country. 52% of events involving the group in Nigeria are battles and 30%
are violence against civilians.
Whereas in Chad, nearly 60% of the violent events
associated with Boko Haram have been battles; in Cameroon the proportion is
just less than 40%; and in Niger it is 48%. In Niger and Cameroon, Boko Haram
is engaged in proportionally more violence against civilians (39% and 41%,
respectively).
This pattern may be a function of Chad’s more robust
security sector and the proximity of the Chadian capital (N’djamena) to the
conflict, as compared to the capitals of Nigeria, Niger, and Cameroon, which
makes confining Boko Haram a more acute problem for the Chadian state.
So far in 2019, nearly half of all violent events
involving the group have occurred outside of Nigeria – a proportion that is
unusually high for the group. Boko Haram’s geographic pattern of activity in
2019 thus far resembles 2016, when almost 48% of the group’s activities where
outside of Nigeria.
The 2016 geographic expansion came in the face of a
renewed military effort that successfully dislodged the group from its
territorial holdings in North East Nigeria.
As demonstrated below, the surge in Boko Haram’s
activity outside of Nigeria in 2019 came after a number of clashes with the
Nigerian military between December 2018 – February 2019. This pressure, like in
2016, may have incentivized Boko Haram to shift its activities beyond Nigeria’s
borders.
The composition of Boko Haram’s operations outside
of Nigeria are significantly different between the group’s 2016 and 2019
geographic expansions. 31% of events in 2016 were comprised of violence against
civilians and 29% were battles with
government forces; in 2019, 64% are violence against civilians and 18% are
battles with government forces.
Violence against civilians may be a strategy adopted
by the insurgents to maintain an operational presence in these areas without
bearing the risk that comes with confronting state security forces. The
prevalence of violence against civilians, as compared to clashes with state
security forces, suggests that Boko Haram is in greater control of where and
when it engages in violent activities in 2019 than in 2016.
This strategy
may be at play whether the violence against civilians is being adopted in
response to degraded insurgent capacity or because Boko Haram is the most
violent armed group in the area and is less reliant on civilian support.
This prevalence of violence against civilians in
recent months also suggests an anemic state response to Boko Haram’s activities
outside of Nigeria.
Of particular note is the prevalence of abductions
outside of Nigeria. In 2019 the number of abductions outside of Nigeria has
already surpassed the total number of such events in 2016 abductions account
for nearly 19% of the violence against civilian events outside of Nigeria in
2019 thus far.
It may be that Boko Haram is using violence against
civilians in response to competition with other armed groups. Some have
suggested that there is factional competition within Boko Haram, pitting the
faction lead by Barnawi (and reportedly backed by the Islamic State) against
the faction lead by Shekau.
There have only been two reported instances in 2019
thus far, however, of clashes between Barnawi and Shekau’s factions. It seems
likely, then, that Boko Haram is engaging in kidnappings to bolster its ranks, and
contribute to an atmosphere of pervasive insecurity, and is engaging in attacks
on civilians to create new frontlines in the conflict.