BOKO HARAM USES WEAPONS STOLEN FROM NIGERIAN ARMY
When Washington imposed sanctions in June 2012 on Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau, he dismissed it as an empty gesture.
Two years later, Shekau’s skepticism appears well founded: his Islamic
militant group is now the biggest security threat to Africa’s top oil
producer, is richer than ever, more violent and its abductions of women
and children continue with impunity.
As the United States,
Nigeria and others struggle to track and choke off its funding,Reuters
interviews with more than a dozen current and former U.S. officials who
closely follow Boko Haram provide the most complete picture to date of
how the group finances its activities.
Central to the militant
group’s approach includes using hard-to-track human couriers to move
cash, relying on local funding sources and engaging in only limited
financial relationships with other extremists groups. It also has reaped
millions from high-profile kidnappings.
“Our suspicions are
that they are surviving on very lucrative criminal activities that
involve kidnappings,” U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for African
Affairs Linda Thomas-Greenfield said in an interview.
Until now, U.S. officials have declined to discuss Boko Haram’s financing in such detail.
The United States has stepped up cooperation with Nigeria to gather
intelligence on Boko Haram, whose militants are killing civilians almost
daily in its north-eastern Nigerian stronghold.
But the lack
of international financial ties to the group limit the measures the
United States can use to undermine it, such as financial sanctions.
The U.S. Treasury normally relies on a range of measures to track
financial transactions of terrorist groups, but Boko Haram appears to
operate largely outside the banking system.
To fund its
murderous network, Boko Haram uses primarily a system of couriers to
move cash around inside Nigeria and across the porous borders from
neighboring African states, according to the officials interviewed by
Reuters.
In designating Boko Haram as a terrorist organisation
last year, the Obama administration characterised the group as a violent
extremist organisation with links to al Qaeda.
The Treasury
Department said in a statement to Reuters that the United States has
seen evidence that Boko Haram has received financial support from al
Qaeda in the Islamic Magreb (AQIM), an offshoot of the jihadist group
founded by Osama bin Laden.
But that support is limited.
Officials with deep knowledge of Boko Haram’s finances say that any
links with al Qaeda or its affiliates are inconsequential to Boko
Haram’s overall funding.
“Any financial support AQIM might
still be providing Boko Haram would pale in comparison to the resources
it gets from criminal activities,” said one U.S. official, speaking on
condition of anonymity.
Assessments differ, but one U.S. estimate of financial transfers from AQIM was in the low hundreds of thousands of dollars.
That compares with the millions of dollars that Boko Haram is estimated to make through its kidnap and ransom operations.
Lucrative kidnapping racket
Ransoms appear to be the main source of funding for Boko Haram’s
five-year-old Islamist insurgency in Nigeria, whose 170 million people
are split roughly evenly between Christians and Muslims, said the U.S.
officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
In February
last year, armed men on motorcycles snatched Frenchman Tanguy
Moulin-Fournier, his wife and four children, and his brother while they
were on holiday near the Waza National Park in Cameroon, close to the
Nigerian border.
Boko Haram was paid an equivalent of about
$3.15m by French and Cameroonian negotiators before the hostages were
released, according to a confidential Nigerian government report later
obtained by Reuters.
Figures vary on how much Boko Haram earns
from kidnappings. Some U.S. officials estimate the group is paid as much
as $1m for the release of each abducted wealthy Nigerian.
It
is widely assumed in Nigeria that Boko Haram receives support from
religious sympathisers inside the country, including some wealthy
professionals and northern Nigerians who dislike the government,
although little evidence has been made public to support that assertion.
Current and former U.S. and Nigerian officials say Boko Haram’s
operations do not require significant amounts of money, which means even
successful operations tracking and intercepting their funds are
unlikely to disrupt their campaign.
Boko Haram had developed “a
very diversified and resilient model of supporting itself,” said Peter
Pham, a Nigeria scholar at the Atlantic Council think-tank in
Washington.
“It can essentially ‘live off the land’ with very
modest additional resources required,” he told a congressional hearing
on June 11.
Low cost weapons
“We’re not talking about a group
that is buying sophisticated weapons of the sort that some of the
jihadist groups in Syria and other places are using. We’re talking
AK-47s, a few rocket-propelled grenades, and bomb-making materials. It
is a very low-cost operation,” Pham told Reuters.
That includes paying local youth just pennies a day to track and report on Nigerian troop movements.
Much of Boko Haram’s military hardware is not bought; it is stolen from the Nigerian army.
In February, dozens of its fighters descended on a remote military
outpost in the Gwoza hills in north-eastern Borno State, looting 200
mortar bombs, 50 rocket-propelled grenades and hundreds of rounds of
ammunition.
Such raids have left the group well armed.
In dozens of attacks in the past year Nigerian soldiers were swept
aside by militants driving trucks, motor bikes and sometimes even stolen
armored vehicles, firing rocket-propelled grenades.
Boko
Haram’s inner leadership is security savvy, not only in the way it moves
money but also in its communications, relying on face-to-face contact,
since messages or calls can be intercepted, the current and former U.S.
officials said.
“They’re quite sophisticated in terms of
shielding all of these activities from legitimate law enforcement
officials in Africa and certainly our own intelligence efforts trying to
get glimpses and insight into what they do,” a former U.S. military
official said.
U.S. officials acknowledge that the weapons that
have served Washington so well in its financial warfare against other
terrorist groups are proving less effective against Boko Haram.
“My sense is that we have applied the tools that we do have but that
they are not particularly well tailored to the way that Boko Haram is
financing itself,” a U.S. defense official said.
7/02/2014
BOKO HARAM USES WEAPONS STOLEN FROM NIGERIAN ARMY
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