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Wednesday, November 19, 2014

Cameroon under pressure from Boko Haram

A destroyed vehicle outside a military post in Amchide, Cameroon (15 November 2014)
Boko Haram attacked a military most in the border village of Amchide
Cameroon's military are battling cross-border raids by Nigeria's militant Islamist group Boko Haram, as the BBC's Thomas Fessy found out when he joined soldiers on a patrol.

A soldier is standing on the back of a flatbed pick-up truck leading the convoy.

His high-powered twin-barrelled gun is turned towards Nigeria. In reality, though, the weapon is aimed at what Boko Haram call their "caliphate", or Islamic state.
The border village of Amchide is mostly deserted. Only a handful of people can be seen as we drive through.
They are hastily throwing a few belongings on a cart as they prepare to leave. They probably did not have time to take anything when they fled during an attack, and came back to recover their possessions.
The dusty road is the line that the militants keep crossing on almost a daily basis now, attacking the villages and Cameroonian army positions.
A Nigerian woman who has fled to Cameroon because of attacks by Boko Haram (November 2014) Thousands of Nigerians have fled to CameroonA Nigerian woman who has fled to Cameroon because of attacks by Boko Haram (November 2014) Many of them walked long distances to escape Boko Haram
"Every day, there are gunshots," a Cameroonian commander says.
He explains that the situation is so tense that he would rather stay anonymous.
"They are there; they are turning, watching, trying to know what we are doing and how we can react. It's unpredictable. Boko Haram is like a ghost."
'Not our war'
The strain is tangible. Cameroon's elite Rapid Intervention Battalion, commonly known by its French acronym BIR, has lost dozens of men since the beginning of the year in the fight against Boko Haram.
About 1,000 men from BIR, trained by US and Israeli forces, have been deployed along a 500-km (300- mile) stretch of porous border with Nigeria.
Boko Haram is advancing and Cameroon's military fight daily battles to keep the boundary with Nigeria - Africa's most populous state - intact.
A road in Amchide, northern Cameroon (25 November 2014)
Most of the village is now deserted
Cameroonian soldiers deploying as part of a reinforcement of its military forces against Nigerian Islamist group Boko Haram (17 June 2014)
Military reinforcements have been sent to the border
Cameroon's military recently dispatched another 2,000 soldiers to the border region to reinforce troops.
Last month, Boko Haram attacked the military post at Amchide with a tank.
A car bomb exploded a few metres away minutes before the tank stormed the gate of the Cameroonian base. The tank's charred remains are still to be seen outside the military post.
Cameroonian soldiers complain that they have been left to fight a war which started in another country on their own.
On the other side of the front line, the Nigerian army has fled.
"And the French, where are the French?" an army officer bitterly asks, referring to the French counter-terrorism force commanded from Ndjamena, the capital of Chad, only a few hundred kilometres to the north-east.
Who are Boko Haram?
Founded in 2002
  • Initially focused on opposing Western education - Boko Haram means "Western education is forbidden" in the Hausa language
  • Launched military operations in 2009 to create Islamic state
  • Founding leader Mohammed Yusuf (pictured above) killed in same year in police custody
  • Succeeded by Abubakar Shekau
  • Declared terrorist group by US in 2013
  • Seized towns for first time in August 2014
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The rains have come to an end and the rivers have dried. Cameroonian soldiers know that during the dry season, more attacks are likely.
Their concern is that the militants, who have taken control of some ten towns in Nigeria, want to raise the black flag of their "caliphate" on their territory as well.
"No one is really able to say what Boko Haram wants," says Saibou Issa, specialist in Peace and Security Studies at the University of Maroua, the capital of Cameroon's Far North region.
"But they are able to play on the fact that the cross-border security co-operation is non-existent. It is only a matter of time before Boko Haram launches a terror attack in Maroua. Then it will trigger a much bigger crisis."
There are suspicion and fear on the streets of Maroua, which has a population of more than 200,000.
"I don't feel comfortable near people whom I don't really know well," says a student at the university, "I make sure that I am home before six PM."
"Never go out without your ID card," says the young man next to her as they queue to register for their exams.
People collect water from a pump on 13 November 2014 in a UNHCR camp for Nigerian refugees in Minawao, in the extreme north-west of Cameroon
People are getting used to life in refugee camps
Children attend classes on 13 November 2014 in a UNHCR camp for Nigerian refugees in Minawao, in the extreme north-west of Cameroon
School have also been established for displaced children
Women prepare food on 13 November 2014 in a camp for Nigerian refugees in Minawao, in the extreme north-west of Cameroon
The conflict has affected some three million people
"Anything can happen and if you are caught in the area when it does, without documents, you will automatically become a suspect," he says.
In this impoverished region, pastoralists and traders cannot move across the border anymore.
The long-term economic impact of Boko Haram's military campaign, launched in Nigeria in 2009, is grim.
About 43,000 Nigerians have poured into Cameroon so far, according to the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR).
'You must convert'
"We expect thousands more in the coming weeks," says Samuel Cameroun at Minawao refugee camp, which currently hosts 17,000 people.
They all arrive there with stories of unspeakable suffering inflicted by Boko Haram.
Boko Haram video shows fighters parading captured tank in an unidentified town. 9 Nov 2014
A recent Boko Haram video showed fighters parading an armoured vehicle in an unidentified town
A street scene in Maroua, Cameroon (November 2014)
Many people in Maroua city are gripped by fear
"When they took over my town, we felt like prisoners," says Mariamu Ali, 26.
Her husband was shot dead by Boko Haram in Gwoza, a Nigerian town with a population of more than 250,000 captured by Boko Haram in August when it declared a caliphate in areas under its control.
After a year on the run, the rest of Mrs Ali's family is finally reunited here at the camp.
From the foothills of Gwoza in Borno state, they had kept fleeing southwards, from one attack after another.
map
"When they ordered single and widowed women to marry fighters, I knew I had to escape," says Mrs Ali, a Muslim.
When Boko Haram raids a town or a village, it rules with guns and knives.
Adamou Moussa, a Christian, shows me a large scar on his right arm.
He took a bullet during one attack, he says, and in another attack his left hand was maimed.
"They said: 'We have come purposely for you, you have to be a Muslim today'," Mr Moussa explains.
To the militants who threatened to slit his throat if he did not comply, he replied: "To be a Muslim for me is not a day job. I cannot be a Muslim. I have my religion."
A Boko Haram fighter went for his neck but he raised his hand to protect himself. One of his fingers was severed.
People like Mr Moussa are lucky to have escaped Boko Haram's rule and are safe for now but the brutality they left behind in Nigeria may soon follow them as Boko Haram has already spread its war into Cameroon.

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