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  • News - North East - Yobe
  • Updated: April 28, 2021

ISWAP Terrorists Share N20,000 To Over 50 Households In Geidam, Yobe State

ISWAP Terrorists Share N20,000 To Over 50 Households In Geid

Map of Yobe

The Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) terrorist group has begun giving residents of Geidam, Yobe State cash gifts, with the hope of getting some of them to join its rank as terrorists.

According to Hum Angle, the splinter terrorist group has shared N20,000 to over 50 households as of Tuesday evening.

The terror group had invaded the Local Government Area on the evening of Friday, April 23, and had since held sway over the territory, resisting attempts by the Nigerian military to recapture the place.

READ ALSO: Terrorists Attack UN Base in Borno – Report

The group had destroyed private and public properties, including telecommunication facilities, but has desisted from harming civilians, especially Muslims.

They also hoisted their flag and distributed propaganda leaflets inviting residents to join their group.

“My people are helpless, you can’t imagine that as a full Nigerian citizen you can be at the mercy of Boko Haram for the past 24 hours and nobody cares to do anything about it,” Lawan Shettima, the federal lawmaker representing the locality, lamented on Saturday, disputing claims that the Nigerian military had dealt a heavy blow to the invaders.

Many residents of the town, including the state capital, Damaturu, have fled. One of them, Rawana Usman, told Daily Trust that the terrorists killed two Christian employees of a non-governmental organization in his neighborhood.

“They were going round houses targeting Christians, NGO workers, and those that are educated in the western schools,” he said.

“When I heard of the selective killings, I couldn’t resist, I left abruptly. I can say that there were soldiers engaging them. They have been doing their best to push out the terrorists, but I can tell you that these boys were moving normally in the town up to the time I left.”

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A 2019 report by the International Crisis Group, a non-profit think tank, observed that ISWAP’s approach to recruiting new fighters proved effective. Despite breaking away from the Abubakar Shekau-led Boko Haram faction in 2016, the population of its fighters had roughly doubled those of the latter according to estimates.

“Although its leadership has been largely ethnic Kanuri, ISWAP has recruited significantly among lacustrine communities, notably the ethnic Buduma, many of whom earn a living from fishing,” the group wrote.

The Institute for Security Studies (ISS) has made similar observations.

“As part of this approach, the ideological aspect of the crisis must be dealt with. The ability of the group to recruit is one of the biggest reasons for its expansion, and so a deeper understanding of its recruitment patterns and operating mechanisms is crucial,” ISS senior researcher Remadji Hoinathy warned in May 2019.

ISWAP often exploits gaps in governance by trying to prove that it can provide essential services in the areas under its control.

 

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