The Global Terrorism Index (GTI) has shown that Nigeria witnessed an increase in Boko Haram terrorists’ attacks on military targets, last year.
“Over the past year, Boko Haram increased attacks on military targets, with deaths rising from 26 in 2018 to 148 in 2019,” the report said.
This year’s report ranked Nigeria, for the sixth consecutive time, since 2015, as the third country with the worst impact from terrorism, globally.
Afghanistan is top on the list, followed by Iraq. Syria, Somalia, and Yemen are ranked fourth, fifth, and sixth, respectively.
However, the report, which was released, last Wednesday night, showed that terror-related incidents fell by 27 per cent in the same period.
This was attributed to a significant reduction in violence attributed to killer herdsmen.
“Despite an overall decline in terrorism, Nigeria’s deadliest terrorist group, Boko Haram, recorded an increase in terrorist activity mainly targeted at civilians. Terror-related deaths and incidents attributed to Boko Haram in Nigeria increased by 25 and 30 per cent, respectively, from the prior year.
“In 2019, Boko Haram carried out 11 suicide bombings, causing 68 fatalities. Suicide bombings accounted for six per cent of all terror-related incidents by Boko Haram in 2019, marking an 89 per cent decline from their peak in 2017,” the report read.
Other countries among the 10 most impacted by terrorism are Pakistan (seventh), India (eighth), Democratic Republic of the Congo (ninth), and Philippines (10th).
A key point in the 2020 GTI report is the shift in ISIL-related attacks away from the Middle East to sub-Saharan Africa. According to the 2020 GTI report, “41 per cent of total ISIL-related attacks in 2019 occurred in sub-Saharan Africa”.
GTI’s report also noted that female suicide bombings declined by 96 per cent the previous year with four female suicide bombers carrying out two attacks, and killing nine.
According to the report, Nigeria witnessed her worst terrorist attack in 2019 in Borno State, where, at least, 70 people were killed, and 10 others wounded when assailants attacked a funeral.
Over the years, several international organisations have attributed inequalities and extreme poverty to the increased terrorism in sub-Saharan Africa.
They say the existence of neo-patrimonial practices, corruption, and bad governance amplifies the impact of horizontal inequalities and extreme poverty on the spread of terrorism.
Another contributing factor is the polarisation by certain elites of identity differences for political purposes.
– The Tide