
Somalia: President Says Boko Haram Is Training in East Africa.
"Without a stable Somalia, the whole region of the
Horn of Africa will remain unstable and by and large, the African continent,”
Mohamud said, using Boko Haram as an example. "There are proofs and evidence
that [for] some time Boko Haram has been trained in Somalia and they went back
to Nigeria … The terrorists are so linked together, they are associated and so
organised, we the world we need to be so organised,” he urged.
He did not indicate where within Somalia he believed
Boko Haram had traveled to train. Somalia’s most prominent terrorist group is
Al-Shabaab, a Sunni jihadi group believed to be formally associated with
al-Qaeda. Al-Qaeda is an Islamic State rival, while Boko Haram accepted ISIS head
Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi as their "Caliph” in March 2015. Boko Haram has issued
appeals to al-Shabaab to abandon al-Qaeda and join ISIS, and the leadership of
the group in Raqqa have also released propaganda urging al-Shabaab jihadists to
join the Islamic State.
It is not clear how much of al-Shabaab heeded these
calls, but there is evidence that, at least in part, al-Shabaab has defected
away from al-Qaeda. In November 2015, members of al-Shabaab considered rebels
against the group’s leadership released a video pledging allegiance to
al-Baghdadi.
As early as March 2015, when Boko Haram had just
folded into the Islamic State, reports began surfacing that the deserts of
Mauritania had become home to a number of terrorist training camps used by both
the Islamic State and al-Qaeda. Mauritania is in West Africa, however, a
continent’s span away from Somalia.
Al-Shabaab remains extremely active in Somalia,
taking credit Monday for the assassination of former government minister
Mohydin Hassan Haji, killed by a car bomb in the capital, Mogadishu.
The news of Somalia — if not al-Shabaab specifically
— providing a renewable supply of training venues for Boko Haram follows months
of the Nigerian government insisting that it has decimated Boko Haram, with
President Muhammadu Buhari insisting "we won the war” against the group.
"We are winning the war. We are bringing the war to
conclusion, very soon,” Brigadier General Victor Ezugwu of the Nigerian Army
reiterated this weekend, insisting that the capital of beleaguered Borno state,
Maiduguri, was finally relatively safe. Borno has begun an attempt to bring its
internally displaced persons (IDPs) back from other parts of Nigeria, after
having fled when the state’s villages were hit with suicide bombers, horseback
raids, and other major Boko Haram attacks.
Borno remains the center of Boko Haram activity in
Nigeria, as the group uses the dense Sambisa forest as a makeshift
headquarters. Neighboring states remain a target, however, and the government
is announcing improvements in quality of life there, too.
After halting all market activity in Adamawa state,
the government announced this week that businesses are once again allowed to be
open, and all suspected of trading with Boko Haram jihadists have been dealt
with. Adamawa governor Ibrahim Gaidam officially announced Monday that "no part
of the state” is under Boko Haram control, and the process of bringing 300,000
IDPs back to the region will soon begin.


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Somalia: President Says Boko Haram Is Training in East Africa.
The President of Somalia, Hassan Sheikh Mohamud, asserted at a security conference Sunday that Islamic State affiliate Boko Haram has sent its jihadists across the country from Nigeria to train in Somalia.