Just over a year ago, armed men on motorcycles entered a
national park in Cameroon, near the Nigerian border, and swiftly abducted a
family of vacationing French tourists — a husband and wife and their four
children, along with their uncle.
Two months later, the
kidnappers released the hostages along with 16 others in exchange for a cool
$3.15 million. The transaction was made by French and Cameroonian negotiators,
but it was not divulged who made the payments, according to Reuters.
So landed another cash
infusion into the coffers of Boko Haram, that has now gained worldwide infamy
through the mass kidnapping of school girls in northern Nigeria. Long before
its latest wave of attacks, the Islamist group has efficiently financed violent
acts in the service of its mission to impose Shariah law through a combination
of lucrative criminal enterprises, say experts who tracked the group.
In addition to kidnappings,
Boko Haram has secured financing through extortion, cooperation with
international drug cartels and operating fake charities, these experts say.
“What is certain about Boko
Haram is that the organisation is very well funded; without an ever-increasing
cash flow, the movement would have died out long ago,” reads a report from the
Terrorism Research and Analysis Consortium, a research initiative of the
reference publisher Beacham Group.
About a decade ago, shortly
after Boko Haram was founded, it drew the majority of its funds from people in
surrounding communities who supported its goal of imposing Islamic law while
ridding Nigeria of Western influences, according to a report from the National
Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism (START) based
at the University of Maryland.
But that means of fundraising
was inherently limited in a country in which 54 per cent of people are
classified as “extremely poor” by the World Bank.
In recent times, Boko Haram
has broadened it’s funding by drawing on foreign donors, and other ventures
such as fake charity organisations, extortion, and deals with global drug
cartels, according to the START report. Its most recent foray — the kidnapping
of 276 schoolgirls to sell on the black market as “wives” — is merely the
outgrowth of a coherent strategy to find funds for expansion through whatever
means necessary.
The term Boko Haram
translates to “Western education is forbidden,” in the local Hausa language of
the predominantly Muslim region in northern Nigeria where the group is based.
Since its formation in the
early 2000s, the militia has been carrying out violent attacks around the
country. Since 2009, when the group’s founding leader was killed and replaced
by his second-in-command, the attacks have grown significantly more violent and
intense, according to the START report. Last year, the US State Department
officially designated the group as a “foreign terrorist organisation.”
“What Boko Haram achieved in
less than a year is quite remarkable,” wrote David Doukhan of the International
Institute for Counter-Terrorism, in a 2013 report, citing their reign over many
parts of northeastern Nigeria, the institution of Sharia law, tax collection
and an Islamic education system to recruit youth to their cause.
This expansion has required
increasingly large sources of funding, which has apparently led Boko Haram to
ratchet up its methods of raising money.
“Perhaps less sophisticated
than other tactics, kidnapping has become one of the group’s primary funding
sources,” wrote Jacob Zenn, African and Eurasian affairs analyst at The
Jamestown Foundation, in a recent report.
But the group receives steady
support from abroad, including from Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, according
to the US State Department, while using links to that terrorist group to secure
further donations from sympathisers in the United Kingdom and Saudi Arabia,
along with weapons and training.
An unnamed United States
intelligence official last week told The Daily Beast that the Islamist group
had received “strategic direction” from Osama bin Laden.
Boko Haram cloaks its sources
of finance through the crafty use of a highly decentralized distribution
network, say experts. The group employs an Islamic model of money transfer
called “hawala,” based on an honour system and a global network of agents that
leaves no trace.
“The very features which make
hawala attractive to legitimate customers — efficiency, anonymity and lack of a
paper trail — also make the system attractive for the transfer of illicit
funds,” reads a report from the US Treasury Department.
Other direct fundraising
includes fake charities and nonprofits. Some have reported that the group
receives regular payment from local leaders in northern Nigeria to protect
their land.
An untraceable flow of money
plus loosely guarded borders has created an ideal environment for black market
trade. The porosity of Nigeria’s borders offers the group a steady flow of
weapons, training, radicalisation and funding.
A 2012 report from the
Inter-University Center for Terrorism Studies alleges that Nigerian terrorist
groups are financed by drug cartels in Latin America.
Lauretta Napoleoni, an
Italian journalist and expert on terrorist finance, said this began to happen
when the 2001 Patriot Act made it difficult to transfer drugs through the US to
Europe.
“Nobody wants to admit that
cocaine reaches Europe via West Africa,” said Napoleoni. “This kind of business
is a type of business where Islamic terrorist organizations are very much
involved.”
Beyond drugs, Boko Haram has
joined other criminal groups in Africa in the billion-dollar rhino and elephant
poaching industry, according to a recent report from Born Free USA, a wildlife
conservation organization.
“While impoverished locals
are enlisted to pull the triggers, it is highly organized transnational crime
syndicates and militias that run the poaching and reap the lion’s share of the
profits, funding terrorism and increasingly war,” wrote New Scientist’s Richard
Shiffman.
Using these extensive
networks, Boko Haram members can smuggle anything from sugar and flour to
weapons or even people across international borders. This, plus kidnapping
ransoms and donations from abroad, is one of the most important factors keeping
them in business.
Earlier this week, the U.S.
State Department announced plans to further its efforts to counter Boko Haram,
given the importance of Nigeria as an economic and political leader in Africa.
“The US has a vital interest
in helping to strengthen Nigeria’s democratic institutions, boost Nigeria’s
prosperity and security, and ensure opportunity for all of its citizens,”
according to a public statement.
A major part of their plan
includes a counterterrorism finance program, that “aims to restrict Boko
Haram’s ability to raise, move and store money.”
By Kathleen Caulderwood,
International Business Times
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