The Nigerian Security Network, an organization monitoring the
casualties surrounding the Boko Haram insurgency, estimates that 2014
was the deadliest year so far in the terrorist group's five year
insurgency in Northeast Nigeria.
According to World Bulletin,
the monitoring group estimates that over 9,000 people have been killed
as a result of Boko Haram violence in 2014, while over 1.5 million
people have been displaced from their homes due to the conflict.
Additionally,
the group estimates that 940 people were killed by insurgent attacks in
just the month of November alone, while May saw the highest death toll
of any month when over 4,000 deaths were tallied due to the violent
insurgency.
Another estimation done by the Council for Foreign Relations found a
similar number when it reported that over 10,340 deaths occurred from
November 2013 to November 2014 due to Boko Haram violence. Boko Haram's
death toll in that time matches that of a United Nations' estimation of
the Islamic State terrorist group's death toll in Iraq of 10,733 in the
same time span.
As Boko Haram attacks, bombings, shootings, farm
raids and abductions have become quite a regular occurrence, one
Nigerian senator is saying that the conflict has gotten so out of hand
in his own state of Borno that people can not live their lives without
fear.
"The violence has become so bad that people don't have lives anymore," Sen. Ahmed Zanna told NBC News.
"They cannot got to their farms, they cannot go to their businesses. It
dominates peoples' lives every single day. They have no help from the
army, the people who are supposed to protect them. They are scared, and
that fear is real."
As the group has become stronger in the last
few years and has carried out more frequent attacks in the states of
Yobe, Borno and Adamawa in addition to less frequent attacks in various
areas of other Northern states, a local Borno police chief, who has
witnessed the rise of the extremist group in his town of Maiduguri in
2009, attests that Boko Haram attacks in his own jurisdiction are
starting to become a daily occurrence. He said that he is seeing more
and more adolescent males being abducted and forced to become soldiers.
"Almost
every day in 2014 was marred by deadly attack by Boko Haram, unlike
previous years," Police Chief Alhaji Yusuf Hassan said. "The insurgents
started abducting teenagers and young men as foot soldiers this year. We
didn't have all these terrible things back in 2009."
Boko
Haram became a household name in April when it made headlines by
kidnapping 276 schoolgirls from a secondary school in the town of
Chibok. The kidnapping spawned heightened international attention toward
the group, as the creation of the popular #BringBackOurGirls movement
gained support from many including First Lady Michelle Obama.
Along
with the killings and abductions and the more than one million people
displaced, the Coalition of Society Groups of Nigeria estimates that
Boko Haram has also destroyed over 800 school buildings, halting
education for over 194,000 students who have not been displaced.
Although
Nigeria's general election is about two months away, many Nigerian
politicians in the Northeast are skeptical that elections can be held in
the region.
"It's rather insensitive to continue to talk about
elections," Borno Governor Kashim Shettima told a private TV station.
"In Borno alone, more than two million people have been internally
displaced, while thousands have been killed."
Source:
christianpost.com
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