Nigeria’s President Muhammadu Buhari is calling for civilian “foot soldiers”
in the fight against Boko Haram, appealing to traditional hierarchies and
centuries-old methods to weed out Islamist plotters.
Eyes and ears on the ground were vital, he said, as concern mounts over
suicide and bomb attacks in the northeast, particularly in mosques.
“The ward head, the village head and the local police knew every new entrant
into the community,” Buhari said late last month.
“They kept tabs on them and detected traits of criminality before evil-doers
got the chance to act against (the) common interest. We must go back to those
rudimentary acts of local policing…
“In this new phase of war, all of us are generals, all of us are foot
soldiers, and all of us are intelligence officers.”
Buhari has ordered his military commanders to end the violence by the end of
the year, after at least 17,000 deaths and more than 2.5 million made homeless
in six years of conflict.
– Plots foiled –
Human intelligence is crucial to any counter-insurgency. But claims of military
abuses against civilians in Nigeria, have eroded co-operation and trust.
Boko Haram has also regularly attacked civilian militia assisting the
military.
So Buhari now must rebuild confidence by restoring the public’s faith in the
armed forces to protect them.
In Kano, an alliance of locals, traditional chiefs and security agencies has
shown co-operation can work, despite sporadic attacks since an almost daily
round of bombings and shootings in 2012, said security analyst Abdullahi Bawa
Wase.
“Several Boko Haram plots against Kano were uncovered, hundreds of
insurgents including high-profile figures were arrested or neutralised through
this simple but effective strategy of involving every member of the community
in maintaining security,” he told AFP.
High-profile targets included the head of the Boko Haram offshoot Ansaru,
Abubakar Adam Kambar, killed in a military raid on his hideout in March 2012.
The following September, Boko Haram spokesman Abu Qaqa was shot dead on the
outskirts of the city.
– Traditional structure –
Like many ancient cities in northern Nigeria, Kano maintains a strong traditional
royal institution led by an emir, who tops a hierarchical administrative
structure involving chiefs at ward, village and district levels.
The emir’s function is largely ceremonial but he still wields enormous
influence on people in temporal and spiritual matters. Last year, he called for
people to take up arms against the militants.
With the current emir and his predecessor having spoken out against Boko
Haram, Kano residents feel duty-bound to pass on information about suspicious
activity.
“Most of the successes we have recorded against Boko Haram in Kano were
through tip-offs from residents and the local authorities, who report
suspicious new characters in the community,” said one security source in Kano.
“Appropriate security measures” are taken once there are strong grounds to
suspect an individual of belonging to the group, the source added.
Nigeria security analyst Jacob Zenn said Kano had shown community patrols
and information networks could work but there had been mixed results elsewhere.
“There are some reports of stopping insurgents but other reports of Civilian
JTF (joint task force) abusing suspects, which is exactly what the ‘civilian’
community patrols were intended not to do,” he said.
– Resolved to inform –
Yan St-Pierre, from the Modern Security Consulting Group, said localised
intelligence was “very effective if not impeded and… a fantastic way to counter
the mobility and stealth of terrorist organisations”.
In Kano, one community leader said “deep-seated pride” in the city as a
centre of commerce and Islamic scholarship binds the population.
“Boko Haram threatens both,” he said.
“Boko Haram militants are generally seen as outsiders from the northeast
sneaking into Kano to destroy it, as they did Maiduguri, which makes the people
take it upon themselves to provide information on them.”
For St-Pierre, the key is following-up on tips.
“If authorities are not willing to act on the provided intelligence, and
there have been some cases in Nigeria, then the best information in the world
will be of little use,” he added.
Zenn suggested Buhari could build on the military’s recent focus on cutting
Boko Haram supply lines using community patrols.
“In this way the civilians do not have to directly inform on Boko Haram
members, who could even be their own family members, which they may avoid doing
for fear of retaliation, but instead can focus on starving Boko Haram of the
weapons and food it needs to support fighters,” he added.
0 Comments
DISCLAIMER
The views and opinions expressed on this platform as comments were freely made by each person under his or her own volition or responsibility and were neither suggested nor dictated by the owners of Precious Eze's Blog or any of their contracted staff. So we take no liability whatsoever for such comments.
Please take note!