THISDAY

UN: Boko Haram is Broke

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The destructiv­e Boko Haram group is currently plagued by financial difficulti­es, the UN Under-Secretary-General for Political Affairs, Jeffrey Feltman, has said.

According to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), Feltman stated this Tuesday while briefing the Security Council on the UN SecretaryG­eneral’s Fourth Report on the threat the group poses to internatio­nal peace and security efforts to “check and roll it back”.

The UN envoy also revealed that Boko Haram was under intense military pressure, but warned against underminin­g its capacity to launch fatal attacks.

“ISIL-affiliate Boko Haram is attempting to spread its influence and commit terrorist acts beyond Nigeria.

“And Boko Haram remains a serious threat, with several thousand fighters at its disposal.

“It is, however, plagued by financial difficulti­es and an internal power struggle, and has split in two factions,” Feltman said.

While the previous reports on the subject had focused on South East Asia, Yemen and East Africa, Libya and Afghanista­n, the fourth report focused on Europe, North Africa and West Africa.

It said ISIL had conducted a range of attacks in Europe since declaring in 2014 its intent to target the region.

Some of these attacks were directed and facilitate­d by ISIL personnel, while others were enabled by ISIL providing guidance or assistance or were inspired through its propaganda, it said.

The report stated that while the military offensive in Libya has dislodged ISIL from its stronghold Sirte, the group’s threat to Libya and neighbouri­ng countries persists.

“Its fighters, estimated to range from several hundred to 3,000, have moved to other parts of the country.

“ISIL has increased its presence in West Africa and the Maghreb, though the group does not control significan­t amounts of territory in the region.

“The reported pledge of loyalty to ISIL by a splinter faction of Al-Mourabitou­n led by Lehbib Ould Ali may elevate the level of the threat.”

Following the increased military pressure, Feltman said ISIL was now on the defensive militarily in several regions, but was also adapting to military pressure by resorting to covert communicat­ions such as the ‘dark web’.

“Although its income and the territory under its control are shrinking, ISIL still appears to have sufficient funds to continue fighting,” he warned.

Feltman noted that ISIL relies mainly on income from extortion and hydrocarbo­n exploitati­on, even though resources from the latter are on the decline.

According to him, UN member states are concerned that ISIL will try to expand other sources of income, such as kidnapping for ransom, and increase its reliance on donations.

“ISIL is adapting in several ways to military pressure, resorting to increasing­ly covert communicat­ion and recruitmen­t methods, including by using the ‘dark web,’ encryption and messengers,” he warned.

The report also focused on some some of the measures taken by member states and the UN, stressing the need to develop sustained and coordinate­d responses to the grave threat posed by ISIL and associated groups and entities.

Feltman said that there were 19 universal counterter­rorism convention­s and protocols, as well as related regional instrument­s on internatio­nal terrorism, and relevant UN General Assembly and Security Council resolution­s.

“But we need to do more, as member states continue to face significan­t challenges to ensure effective internatio­nal cooperatio­n,” he said.

He warned that foreign terrorist fighters leaving the conflict could pose a grave risk to their homeland or to the countries they are travelling to or transiting through, such as Iraq and Syria’s neighbours, as well as countries in the Maghreb.

“Ultimately, it is the spread and consolidat­ion of peace, security, developmen­t and human rights that will most effectivel­y deprive terrorism of the oxygen it needs to survive,” he concluded.

 ??  ?? Abubakar Shekau, leader of Boko Haram
Abubakar Shekau, leader of Boko Haram

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