The Niagara Falls Review

Islamic State wreaking havoc in Nigeria

Violence comes ahead of Saturday election

- PAUL WALLACE

Amina Sanusi was getting ready for morning prayers at her home in northeaste­rn Nigeria when she heard gunshots and explosions.

She scrambled into nearby bushes with her two children, but lost contact with her husband. Government soldiers in the fishing town of Baga on the shores of Lake Chad fled, too, overwhelme­d by the firepower of Islamist militants. Like thousands of others since an upsurge in attacks that started in December, Sanusi, 25, made a 200-kilometre journey by foot and by bus to a camp for displaced people in the Borno state capital, Maiduguri.

“The soldiers tried, but it was too much for them,” said Sanusi, wearing a black hijab and breastfeed­ing her daughter in the Dalori camp. “We were so afraid. I still don’t know what happened to my husband. I’m praying for him.’’

The violence in northeaste­rn Nigeria underscore­s the insecurity plaguing Africa’s biggest oil producer and, by some measures, largest economy ahead of a tight election on Saturday. President Muhammadu Buhari, a 76-yearold former general, is seeking a second term and faces his main challenge from Atiku Abubakar, 72, a businessma­n who once served as a vice-president.

For now, militants loyal to

Boko Haram, which has killed tens of thousands of people in the past decade, and a breakaway faction loyal to Islamic State that more recently appeared on the scene, seem to be gathering momentum.

They ambushed the convoy of Borno’s governor, Kashim Shettima, on Tuesday while he was campaignin­g near the border with Cameroon, killing at least three people, his spokespers­on said. Islamic State’s so-called West Africa Province claimed the attack and said that 42 were dead, according to the SITE Intelligen­ce Group.

The Islamist insurgency, which is affecting countries across West Africa, is the worst of a series of crises threatenin­g to overwhelm the military and police and underminin­g Buhari’s campaign pledge before his 2015 victory to restore security.

Clashes between farmers and herders over grazing land led to around 2,000 deaths last year, mainly in central parts of the country, according to Amnesty Internatio­nal, while thousands have been displaced in the northweste­rn state of Zamfara amid a rise in kidnapping and raids on villages. Tensions are also brewing in the oil-producing Niger River delta, where militants intermitte­ntly sabotage pipelines and other energy infrastruc­ture.

At least 66 people died in a wave of violence this week in north central Kaduna state, the AP reported Friday, citing a local official. A resident blamed clashes between farmers and herdsmen.

“Africa’s most populous country is in for a turbulent few weeks,” said Ben West, an analyst at Stratfor, a risk-advisory firm based in Austin, Texas. “Growing unrest across the country creates an environmen­t for Nigeria’s many regional and sectarian security threats to fester and spread leading up to and following the election.”

While Buhari’s credential­s have been damaged by the insecurity, according to Ed HobeyHamsh­er, an analyst at Bath, U.K.-based Verisk Maplecroft, the setbacks won’t necessaril­y doom his chances for re-election.

“Buhari has done a good job, even with these new attacks,” said Bulama Mani, 35, who arrived in the swelling Dalori camp, which now houses around 20,000 people, three weeks ago after fleeing his home near Baga. “It’s better than it was before,” he said, explaining that Boko

Haram controls much less territory than it did when Buhari came to office.

Abubakar, Buhari’s opponent, has focused mainly on reviving an anemic economy and has said little about how he’d tackle the security problems.

Several others in Dalori who didn’t want to give their names said Abubakar was unpopular because he did little for Borno while he was vice-president between 1999 and 2007.

Nigeria and the UN appealed for almost $850 million this year to assist those living in the northeast ravaged by the crisis, which has displaced 2.5 million people across the Lake Chad region.

 ?? BEN CURTIS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Muslims make traditiona­l Friday prayers in front of a police riot truck, providing security due to the ongoing general threat of attacks by Islamic extremist group Boko Haram, at a mosque in Kano, northern Nigeria.
BEN CURTIS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Muslims make traditiona­l Friday prayers in front of a police riot truck, providing security due to the ongoing general threat of attacks by Islamic extremist group Boko Haram, at a mosque in Kano, northern Nigeria.

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