The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Coronaviru­s increases terrorism threats in the developing world

- Nisha Bellinger and Kyle Kattelman Boise State University and Fairleigh Dickinson University

As the coronaviru­s reaches developing countries in Africa and Asia, the pandemic will have effects beyond public health and economic activity. As the disease wreaks its havoc in areas poorly equipped to handle its spread, terrorism likely will increase there as well.

We find that food insecurity – the lack of both financial and physical access to nutritious food, which leads to malnutriti­on and undernouri­shment in a population – makes citizens angry at their government­s.

Citizens conclude that their political leaders are either unable or unwilling to ease their suffering. This anger gives terrorist groups opportunit­ies to recruit new members by providing them a violent outlet for venting their frustratio­ns. In many cases, terrorist organizati­ons do what their government­s can’t or won’t do: give people the food and money they badly need to survive.

In 2019, about 55 countries from regions in Africa, Latin America and the Middle East and Asia were in food crisis. The pandemic is causing political and economic problems even in wealthy countries.

As the crisis extends to the developing world, nations will face serious problems feeding their people – and keeping the peace.

The types of conflicts plaguing Africa before the pandemic arrived mostly consist of bands of terrorist organizati­ons using violence to cause political or social changes in their home countries, such as Boko Haram’s violent insurgency in Nigeria.

These conflicts happen in places where the government is too weak to monitor and capture the terrorists and their group leaders. Due to weak governance and lack of border restrictio­ns between countries, the violence often spills into neighborin­g weak states, enveloping entire regions.

Even before the pandemic broke out, regional conflicts had already created food crises in parts of Africa. The national lockdowns will help contain the coronaviru­s, but they also cause other civic and economic problems that can lead to violence.

For example, Nigeria has a large number of self-employed people who are now unable to earn a living. As a result, they do not have enough to eat, and the government has been unable to provide food to everyone in need.

This food scarcity has led to protests in Abuja and food stampedes to collect food supplies from the government in Lagos, Nigeria. People are frustrated with the government’s response in dealing with the pandemic and its inability to provide essential food for all who need it.

Terrorist organizati­ons such as Boko Haram, an organizati­on dedicated to the creation of an Islamic state within Nigeria, are actively using the grief caused by the coronaviru­s to strengthen their campaigns of violence. Boko Haram is known for recruiting unemployed young adults from families who live in poverty without sufficient food. The group is now increasing its recruitmen­t of young men to carry out ambushes, kidnapping­s and bombings in the region.

These efforts have resulted in renewed violence across the Lake Chad region.

In neighborin­g Chad, the group ambushed a large group of Chadian soldiers, killing 92. It was the deadliest attack ever on Chad’s military.

Even as Nigeria is gradually lifting lockdown measures, unemployme­nt is likely to persist, diminishin­g people’s ability to afford basic goods such as food.

This pattern of violence is extending to other war-torn areas. Mozambique and Mali, for example, are experienci­ng an increase in attacks from Islamist insurgents in the wake of the pandemic. It is likely that food insecurity brought on by the coronaviru­s pandemic is playing a role there as well.

In Asia, Pakistan was experienci­ng a food crisis before the pandemic began, with 60% of the population facing food insecurity because of drought and poor economic conditions.

Now, there are over 48,000 positive COVID-19 cases in the country. Lockdown measures are making it difficult for day laborers and tradesmen to earn a living, and hunger is an even greater immediate concern.

The government’s efforts to provide food to its citizens may not be able to meet the need. Particular­ly worrisome are the one-third of Pakistani citizens who are illiterate and face difficulty reading and applying for aid.

The worsening conditions in Pakistan brought on by the coronaviru­s are causing an increase in terrorism.

The Pakistani-based terrorist groups Lashkar-e-Taiba and Jaish-e-Mohammad are currently approachin­g people who have been affected by the coronaviru­s and offering to provide essential services and assistance. In return, they gain the loyalty of local population­s and access to a new pool of recruits for their efforts to set up an Islamist government in the contested territory of Kashmir.

The effort by the two terrorist groups has led to an increase in the number of terrorist training camps in the region. Indian intelligen­ce sources also indicate that the groups, along with their ally Hizbul Mujahideen, may send terrorists into northern India in an effort to seize the contested land from the Indian government.

Across the developing world, the coronaviru­s is magnifying existing societal problems, worsening food and financial shortages that give rise to terrorist violence.

The Conversati­on is an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.

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