Business Week brings an insight into how these vigilante groups operate in one of the most dangerous region in the world.
“Allahu Akbar!” local
Nigerian militiamen known as vigilantes shout as they go into battle against
the Islamist militant group, Boko Haram.
They chant partly to
bewilder the insurgents and partly because they too believe in the Islamic
faith and that they have God on their side in a war in northern Nigeria that is
pitting Muslim civilians against militants trying to set up an Islamic
State-style caliphate.
“They become confused about
who is saying the slogan, we lie down and hide, and as they approach we then
open fire on them,” Tasiu Musa, a 40-year-old father of four in Maiduguri told
Business Week.
Musa and thousands of other
Muslim volunteers like him have taken up arms to defend their towns and cities
from Boko Haram, the group whose name roughly translates as “Western education
is a sin.” Armed with flintlock muskets and bows and arrows, the militiamen are
winning back territory that the army has failed to recapture in the region.
“Our town is ruined by
insurgency, our people are being killed on a daily basis,” said Haruna Ibrahim,
another Maiduguri resident.
Ibrahim, a 32-year-old
bricklayer, said the insurgency has wrecked the local economy and cost him his
job. Religion has nothing to do with the militants’ cause, he said. A veteran
of battles in the towns of Damboa, Meiha and Gombi near Boko Haram’s stronghold
in the Sambisa forest, Ibrahim said the militants rob people, shops and banks.
“They relate themselves to
Islam and Muslims, but they are killing everyone: Muslims or Christians,” he
said. “This will tell you that they are not fighting for Islam they are on a
rampage to acquire wealth and their ideology is not Islamic.”
The vigilante groups are
acting out of desperation. As Boko Haram expands its attacks in the region in
its five-year-old campaign to establish Shariah, or Islamic law Nigeria,
leaders like the newly installed Emir of Kano have urged residents to take up
arms and fight the militants.
Bloomberg reports that the
vigilantes’ effectiveness has prompted some states to consider registering and
employing them. Adamawa state said last month it had set up a committee to find
out the best way to hire hunters and militiamen and will screen about 10,000.
It will be recalled that
multiple bombs went off at the Central Mosque in Kano as Muslims were having
their Friday prayers on November 28, 2014.
Business Week
Na wa o
ReplyDeleteToo bad, something need to be done fast.
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