A media group associated with the Nigerian
militant group Boko Haram has published two images which reveal a
military training camp for children in northeastern Nigeria.
The organisation, al-Urwa al-Wuthaqa, shows the children
dressed in dark clothing with their heads covered by garments. In one
photo, the children are aiming their guns while in another they are
posing with the weapons.
The Long War Journal claims that both young girls and boys
are present in the photos, while some are holding AK47 assault rifles,
others are holding cutouts of weapons.
According to Max Abrahms, professor of political
science at Northwestern University and member at the Council of Foreign
Relations, Boko Haram uses child soldiers in order to boost its
membership numbers.
“Terrorist organisations have power in numbers. The more
members in the group, the greater its capability. There is a correlation
between the membership size of a terrorist group and its ability to
inflict bloodshed,” he said.
“Terrorist groups will often try to amass the most members as possible even if they’re young boys or girls.”
Andrew Noakes, coordinator of the Nigeria Security Network,
says the group are struggling to recruit fighters, having “started
alienating local people across northeast Nigeria with their brutal
tactics”.
“To fill the gap they've turned to recruiting children and
recruiting in neighbouring countries,” he says. “Boko Haram often uses
its child soldiers and other forced recruits to form the first wave of
an attack, before sending in the more experienced fighters to finish off
operations.”
Abrahms also believes that because the group has
ambitions of creating an eternal caliphate, in the same vein as ISIS, it
indoctrinates children in the hope that its message will be continued
by the young soldiers.
“[ISIS] has ambitions in building up a caliphate for
eternity. I think Boko Haram shares this aspiration certainly in Nigeria
and the indoctrination of youth is important not just for fielding an
army against the Nigerian military, but also breeding a future
generation of like-minded sympathisers.”
A number of other terrorist organisations have resorted to using child soldiers to boost their numbers. ISIS has previously released videos
of children training at a combat camp, where they are seen being beaten
by their instructor and taught how to use a gun. Uganda’s Lord’s
Resistance Army and al-Qaeda have been known to use child soldiers also.
As the Nigerian presidential election on 14 February inches
closer, Boko Haram have continued to wage their insurgency against
Nigerian authorities in the regions that remain under a state of
emergency - Yobe, Borno and Adamawa - in the country’s northeast.
Hundreds of its fighters are battling government forces in
Borno state’s capital, Maiduguri, while they have captured the town of
Monguno, located approximately 85 miles (135km) from the embattled city.
The attacks took place just a day after Nigerian President
and leader of the People’s Democratic Party, Jonathan Goodluck, paid a
visit to the city as he continues his campaign against leader of the
opposition All Progressives Congress (APC) party, Muhammadu Buhari.
According to the Council on Foreign Relations, the terror
group killed over 10,000 people in 2014 and they have already reportedly
killed over 2,000 people in the first month of 2015 following a series
of mass killings in the town of Baga, in the state of Borno.
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