ACTIVITIES of the violent
Islamic sect, Boko Haram, may get worse given revelations that the group
is sharing funds and swapping explosives with two other terrorist
organisations in Africa.
Commander of the U.S.
military’s Africa Command, General Carter Ham, said indication of
cooperation between Boko Haram, al Shabaab in East Africa, and Al Qaeda
in the Islamic Maghreb could signal a dangerous escalation of security
threats on the continent.
The three organisations are
said to be the continent’s most violent and they are believed to be
sharing money and explosive materials while training fighters together.
Reuters reports on Monday
quoted Ham as saying, “Each of those three organisations is by itself a
dangerous and worrisome threat.
“What really concern me are
the indications that the three organisations are seeking to coordinate
and synchronise their efforts. That is a real problem for us and for
African security in general.”
He spoke at an African
Centre for Strategic Studies seminar for senior military and civilian
officials from Africa, the United States and Europe.
The United States
classified three of the alleged leaders of Boko Haram, as “foreign
terrorists,” on June 20. But it declined to blacklist the entire
organisation to avoid elevating the group’s profile internationally.
Police confirmed that members of the sect seized a prison in Damaturu, Yobe State, on Sunday and freed 40 inmates.
Islamist militant group al
Shabaab is active in war-ravaged Somalia and has been blamed for attacks
in Kenya. Last year it claimed responsibility for the death of Somali
Interior Minister, Abdi Shakur Sheikh Hassan.
Al Qaeda in the Islamic
Maghreb, an affiliate of al Qaeda based in North Africa, is mainly a
criminal organisation operating in the Sahel region. It kidnaps
Westerners for ransom and aids Africa’s drug trade, according to
intelligence officials.
The U.S. and regional
officials fear that a power vacuum in northern Mali following a military
coup in March may open an expanded area of operations for Islamist
militants. Some western diplomats talk of the country becoming a “West
African Afghanistan.”
Ham said AQIM was now
operating “essentially unconstrained” throughout a large portion of
northern Mali, where Islamists have imposed a harsh version of Shariah
law.
“The group was a threat not
only to the countries in the region, but also has “a desire and intent
to attack Americans as well. So that becomes a real problem,” Ham said.
Emphasising that the U.S.
military played mainly a supporting role in Africa, Ham said the US was
providing intelligence and logistical help in the hunt for Ugandan
warlord, Joseph Kony, whose Lord’s Resistance Army was accused of
abducting children to use as fighters and hacking off limbs of
civilians.
The International Criminal
Court in The Hague had indicted Kony for crimes against humanity in
2005, and his case hit the headlines in March when a video entitled Kony
2012; put out by a U.S. activist group and calling for his arrest went
viral across the Internet.
Ham said he was confident that Kony would ultimately be apprehended by African troops.
“This is an African-led
effort. It is the African Union increasingly taking a leadership role
with a little bit of support from the United States military. We think
that is the right approach,” Ham said.
Meanwhile, Ham said on
Monday that the U.S. military was increasing its operations on the
continent as terrorist groups began to work closer together to carry out
attacks in the region.
He said the terrorist
threat in Africa was growing and that the U.S. forces under his command
were focused on al Shabab, al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb in the north,
and Boko Haram.
The US new defence strategy
calls for a greater focus on Africa, but only with a limited presence
of U.S. personnel to train and assist the militaries of countries on the
continent to counter security threats.
Last year, President Barack
Obama authorised the deployment of about 100 U.S. troops to Africa to
help the armed forces of Uganda, the Democratic Republic of Congo, South
Sudan, and the Central African Republic in their campaigns against Kony
and his LRA.
Ham said that enabling the
militaries of partner nations was a more effective approach than sending
the U.S. forces to do the work in the vast area where the LRA was
operating.
“We can help in terms of
logistics, some information and intelligence sharing, of communications,
and a little bit of mobility. I think that’s the best way for us to
provide what I would term unique U.S. military capabilities to assist
our African partner,” Ham said.
The US has only one permanent military base in Africa, in Djibouti, with about 2,000 American personnel.
Ham said there were no plans to build any other base on the continent.
No comments:
Post a Comment