The Herald (South Africa)

Buhari admits to Boko fight setbacks

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Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari has acknowledg­ed setbacks in the fight against Boko Haram as the jihadists launched fresh attacks in the restive northeast.

Buhari , 76, was elected in 2015 on a promise to end the Islamist insurgency, which has killed more than 27,000 people since 2009 and left 1.8-million homeless.

But as the president seeks a second term in elections next month, a wave of attacks, including against military bases, has undermined his claim that the group is virtually defeated.

Soldiers have also complained that Boko Haram fighters are better armed and that the soldiers’ morale is low, particular­ly because of a lack of rotation and support.

In a recorded interview broadcast late on Monday on Arise TV, Buhari conceded that troops had come under pressure from the Islamists’ guerrilla warfare.

Buhari, an ex-army general who became military ruler after ousting the elected government in a 1983 coup, said the “morale question” was correct.

Efforts were being made to address the issue, he said.

Relentless hit-and-run raids, as well as suicide bomb attacks, were hard to deal with by convention­al means, he argued.

“There is really what I would call battle fatigue,” he said, adding that retraining would help combat the jihadists’ tactics.

On Monday evening, fighters loyal to factional leader Abubakar Shekau attacked Sajeri village on the outskirts of the Borno state capital, Maiduguri, killing three people.

At the same time, militants aligned to the Islamic State group-backed Boko faction attacked a military facility in Auno, 23km from the city.

The increase in attacks has seen the appointmen­t of five different commanders of the military operation against Boko in the last two years.

But Buhari has refused to sack his military top brass, unlike his predecesso­r Goodluck Jonathan, who removed senior officers as the jihadists began taking over territory.

“I accept responsibi­lity,” Buhari said in the interview.

But he said such appointmen­ts were not to be taken lightly. “My understand­ing of security is that when you have a case of emergency you have to be careful with the head of [the armed] services.”

Many of the attacks on military installati­ons have been blamed on or claimed by the self-styled Islamic State West Africa Province, headed by Abu Mus’ab Al-Barnawi.

The group broke away from Shekau in mid-2016 in opposition to his indiscrimi­nate targeting of civilians in the conflict. It has instead vowed only to hit “hard” targets.

Security analysts have interprete­d the surge attacks by the extremists as a sign of renewed strength and organisati­on, with possible support from the jihadist networks in the Sahel.

In late December, a naval base and another base for troops from a regional force fighting the jihadists were overrun in the Baga area, on the shores of Lake Chad.

Referring to Monday’s clashes, Babakura Kolo, a member of the Civilian Joint Task Force militia, said soldiers and the CJTF in Auno were attacked by Al-Barnawi fighters.

“There was heavy fighting and the gunmen were repelled with the help of a fighter jet.

“The insurgents had two days ago warned residents of [nearby] Jakana to vacate their homes by Wednesday because they were going to launch a major attack,” he said.

Meanwhile, a community leader from Baga said 10,712 people had registered at camps for internally displaced people in the garrison town of Monguno and Maiduguri.

All had fled as the military prepares a fight-back.

“More people are trooping in because they are scared to live under Boko Haram.”

 ??  ?? MUHAMMADU BUHARI
MUHAMMADU BUHARI

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