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BOKO HARAM: TERRORISM IN NIGERIA

BOKO HARAM: TERRORISM IN NIGERIA. MAP OF NIGERIA. Location: West Africa Total Area: 923,768 km 2 Population: 150 Million 36 States 250 Ethnic groups Official Language: English Main Source of Revenue : Oil. INTRODUCTION. Modern Terrorism before this was alien to Nigeria.

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BOKO HARAM: TERRORISM IN NIGERIA

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  1. BOKO HARAM: TERRORISM IN NIGERIA

  2. MAP OF NIGERIA Location: West Africa Total Area: 923,768 km2 Population: 150 Million 36 States 250 Ethnic groups Official Language: English Main Source of Revenue : Oil

  3. INTRODUCTION • Modern Terrorism before this was alien to Nigeria. • 2. Most notable incident :1980 Maitatsine riots in Kano State. • Militant groups in the Niger Delta area commit kidnapping, sabotage an other terrorist tactics. • 4. 2005: Osama bin Laden declares interest in Nigeria in a videotape. • 5. Boko Haram sect emerges: the current terrorist threat faced by Nigeria.

  4. GOAL EXAMINE THE EFFORTS TO COMBAT TERRORISM IN NIGERIA

  5. SCOPE • Background of the Boko Haram Sect • Challenges of Addressing Terrorism in Nigeria • 3. Measures Adopted to Combat Terrorism in Nigeria

  6. BACKGROUND OF THE BOKO HARAM SECT • Formed by Mohammed Yusuf in Borno, Yobe, Kano and Bauchi States in 2002

  7. 2. The translation of ‘ Boko’ from Hausa is ‘Western education’ while ‘Haram’ means ‘forbidden’ in Arabic. • 3. Established mosques and schools for poor families in the area. • 4. Members of the sect believe that they are law abiding citizens but do not subscribe to democracy which, they consider, is an unjust government of western orientation.

  8. BACKGROUND OF THE BOKO HARAM SECT • The Sect acquires arms and ammunition and begins terrorizing people in the northeastern part of the country. • 5. Security forces clampdown on the group and the leader Mohammed Yusuf is arrested but later shot by policemen on 30 July 2009 while about 700 members were reportedly killed.

  9. 6. Mohammed Shekau: second-in–command takes over. 7. The Sect transforms into a dreaded group now known as Jama’atul Ahlussunnah Lidda’awati Wal-jihad. . 8. Establishes strong links with AQIM and Al Shabaab.

  10. UNRESTRICTED RECENT ACTIVITIES OF THE BOKO HARAM SECT • 1. January 2010: kills 4 in Dala Alemderi ward in Maiduguri metropolis, Borno State. • 7 September 2010: freed over 700 inmates from a prison in Bauchi State. • December 2010: blamed for market bombing; 92 of its members were arrested by police. • Friday 28 January 2011: Borno State candidate of the All Nigeria People's Party (ANPP), Mr Modu Fannami Gubio for the April 2011 gubernatorial elections was assassinated, with his brother, 4 police officers and a 12-year old boy. UNRESTRICTED

  11. RECENT ACTIVITIES OF THE BOKO HARAM SECT(CONT) • 8 February 2011: Boko Haram gave conditions for peace. The radicals demanded that the Borno State Governor, Senator Ali Modu Sheriff, should step down from office with immediate effect and also allow members to reclaim their mosque in Maiduguri, the capital of Borno State. • 6. March 29 2011: police “thwarted a plot to bomb at an [ANPP] election rally” in Maiduguri, Borno State. The threat was blamed on Boko Haram. • April 1 2011: (the day before the original date of Nigeria’s legislative elections), suspected Boko Haram members attacked a police station in Bauchi . • 8. 9 April 2011: suspected bombing of a polling center in Maiduguri. UNRESTRICTED

  12. UNRESTRICTED RECENT ACTIVITIES OF THE BOKO HARAM SECT(CONT) • 9. On April 15, the Maiduguri office of the Independent National Electoral Commission was bombed, and several people were shot in a separate incident on the same day. Authorities suspected Boko Haram. • 10. On April 20, Boko Haram killed a Muslim cleric and ambushed several police officers in Maiduguri. • 11. On April 22, Boko Haram freed 14 prisoners during a jailbreak in Yola, Adamawa State. • 12. On 9 May 2011, Boko Haram rejected an offer for amnesty made by the governor-elect of Borno state, KashimShettima. • 13. 29 May 2011, Boko Haram was blamed for a series of bombings in northern Nigeria that left 15 dead. UNRESTRICTED

  13. UNRESTRICTED RECENT ACTIVITIES OF THE BOKO HARAM SECT(CONT) • 14. June 17, 2011: claims responsibility for a bombing attack on the police force headquarters in Abuja that occurred the previous day. Officials believed that the attack was the first suicide bombing in Nigeria's history and that it specifically targeted Police Inspector-General Hafiz Ringim. • 15. June 26, 2011: suspected bombing attack on a beer garden in Maiduguri, Officials and witnesses: Militants on motorcycles threw explosives into the drinking spot, killing about 25 people. • 16. June 27, 2011, suspected bombing in Maiduguri attributed to the group killed at least 2 girls and wounded 3 customs officials. • 17. July 03, 2011: suspected bombing in a beer garden in Maiduguri attributed to the group kills at least 20 people. UNRESTRICTED

  14. UNRESTRICTED RECENT ACTIVITIES OF THE BOKO HARAM SECT(CONT) • 10 July 2011: suspected bombing the All Christian Fellowship Church in Suleja, Niger State. • 20. 11 July 2011: University of Maiduguri closed its Institution down citing security concerns. • Prominent Muslim Cleric Liman Bana was shot dead by Boko Haram on 12 August 2011. He died after sustaining gunshot wounds while walking home from conducting prayers at the main mosque in Ngala. UNRESTRICTED

  15. UNRESTRICTED RECENT ACTIVITIES OF THE BOKO HARAM SECT(CONT) 22. On 26 August 2011, the UN headquarters in Abuja was blown up by a suicide car bomber, leaving at least 23 dead and dozens more injured and Boko Haram spokesman later claimed responsibility. UNRESTRICTED

  16. UNRESTRICTED CHALLENGES OF ADDRESSING TERRORISM IN NIGERIA UNRESTRICTED

  17. UNRESTRICTED • CHALLENGES OF ADDRESSING TERRORISM • IN NIGERIA • Porous Borders. • 2. Strength and location of the threat. • 3. Mode of operation. • Socio-economic factors. • 5. External Support. • 6. Enabling legislation. UNRESTRICTED

  18. UNRESTRICTED POROSITY OF BORDERS UNRESTRICTED

  19. UNRESTRICTED AQIM AREA OF OPERATION UNRESTRICTED

  20. UNRESTRICTED STRENGTH AND LOCATION OF THE SECT UNRESTRICTED

  21. UNRESTRICTED MODE OF OPERATION UNRESTRICTED

  22. UNRESTRICTED SOCIO – ECONOMIC FACTORS UNRESTRICTED

  23. UNRESTRICTED EXTERNAL SUPPORT UNRESTRICTED

  24. UNRESTRICTED ENABLING LEGISLATION UNRESTRICTED

  25. UNRESTRICTED MEASURES ADOPTED TO COMBAT TERRORISM IN NIGERIA UNRESTRICTED

  26. UNRESTRICTED • MEASURES ADOPTED TO COMBAT TERRORISM • IN NIGERIA • Enhanced interagency cooperation. • 2. International collaboration. • 3. Regulation of religious preaching in the country and sale of fertilizer. • 4. Capacity building. • Review of CT structure. • 6. Anti-terrorism Act 2011. UNRESTRICTED

  27. UNRESTRICTED ENHANCED INTERAGENCY COOPERATION UNRESTRICTED

  28. UNRESTRICTED INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION UNRESTRICTED

  29. UNRESTRICTED REGULATION OF RELIGIOUS PREACHING AND SALE OF FERTILIZER UNRESTRICTED

  30. UNRESTRICTED CAPACITY BUILDING UNRESTRICTED

  31. UNRESTRICTED • CAPACITY BUILDING • United States of America. • United Kingdom. • Germany. • Canada. • Pakistan. • Israel. UNRESTRICTED

  32. UNRESTRICTED REVIEW OF CT STRUCTURE UNRESTRICTED

  33. UNRESTRICTED ANTI-TERRORISM ACT 2011 UNRESTRICTED

  34. UNRESTRICTED ANTI-TERRORISM ACT 2011 The act in Section 2(C) provides that terrorism is viewed as an act which involves anyone who causes “an attack upon a person's life which may cause serious bodily harm or death; kidnapping of a person; destruction to a government or public facility, transport system, an infrastructural facility including an information system, a fixed platform located on the continental shelf, public place or private property likely to endanger human life or result in major economic loss. The seizure (hijack) of an aircraft, ship or other means of public or goods transport and the use of such means of transportation for any of the purposes…" UNRESTRICTED

  35. UNRESTRICTED CONCLUSION UNRESTRICTED

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