Reuters: Islamic State ally stakes out territory around Lake Chad
From the shores of Lake Chad, Islamic State’s West African ally is on a mission: winning over the local people.
Digging wells, giving out seeds and fertilizer and providing safe pasture for herders are among the inducements offered by Islamic State in West Africa (ISWA), which split from Nigeria’s Boko Haram in 2016.
“If you are a herder, driver or trader, they won’t touch you - just follow their rules and regulations governing the territory,” said a herder, who moves cattle in and out of ISWA territory and whose identity Reuters is withholding for his safety. “They don’t touch civilians, just security personnel.”
The campaign, which has created an economy for ISWA to tax, is part of the armed insurgent group’s push to control territory in northeastern Nigeria and in Niger.
Read more ....
WNU Editor: This is the result of Nigeria's brutal (and failed) war against Boko Haram, and we have seen this play book more than once. Many in the region have become radicalized, and the governments in the region do not have the means (or will) to confront ISIS and it supporters .... hence they grow and become a more permanent fixture among the locals.
From the shores of Lake Chad, Islamic State’s West African ally is on a mission: winning over the local people.
Digging wells, giving out seeds and fertilizer and providing safe pasture for herders are among the inducements offered by Islamic State in West Africa (ISWA), which split from Nigeria’s Boko Haram in 2016.
“If you are a herder, driver or trader, they won’t touch you - just follow their rules and regulations governing the territory,” said a herder, who moves cattle in and out of ISWA territory and whose identity Reuters is withholding for his safety. “They don’t touch civilians, just security personnel.”
The campaign, which has created an economy for ISWA to tax, is part of the armed insurgent group’s push to control territory in northeastern Nigeria and in Niger.
Read more ....
WNU Editor: This is the result of Nigeria's brutal (and failed) war against Boko Haram, and we have seen this play book more than once. Many in the region have become radicalized, and the governments in the region do not have the means (or will) to confront ISIS and it supporters .... hence they grow and become a more permanent fixture among the locals.