Boko Haram: Since Nigeria's President Buhari Said Militants Were Finished, They Have Launched 50 Attacks

Nigeria Boko Haram IDPs
Nigerian internally displaced persons hold a placard reading “We need peace to survive” during the visit of Nigerian Vice President Yemi Osinbajo to the Bakassi IDP camp in Maiduguri, Nigeria, on June 8. Boko Haram’s... STRINGER/AFP/Getty

Boko Haram, the Nigerian militant Islamist group that has slaughtered tens of thousands in recent years, appears to have struck again.

The group is suspected of carrying out an attack on a huge police convoy on a major highway in northeast Nigeria, killing at least two people—one police officer and a truck driver. The militants used anti-aircraft guns and other heavy weapons, witnesses told Nigerian newspaper Vanguard.

The attack comes despite the claim made in December 2016 by Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari—currently in the U.K. on sick leave—that the group, which has ties with the Islamic State militant group (ISIS), was "done for" as a fighting force in the Lake Chad Basin, an area that borders Nigeria, Cameroon, Chad and Niger.

But according to a Newsweek review of data collected by the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project (ACLED), Boko Haram have perpetrated at least 48 attacks—successful and unsuccessful—so far in Nigeria up to June 16. This only includes attacks or incidents in which Boko Haram is classified as the perpetrator, rather than also including Nigerian military offensives against the group.

The data is unlikely to be exhaustive, and Boko Haram does not always claim responsibility for attacks. As of 2016, the group has also split into two factions—one headed by longtime chief Abubakar Shekau, the other by ISIS-appointed leader Abu Musab al-Barnawi. But the overall picture painted by the data shows that, while it no longer controls as much territory as it once did, Boko Haram continues to plague the people of northeast Nigeria and surrounding countries with its guerilla tactics, including using children as suicide bombers.

The following are some of the major incidents involving Boko Haram in 2017.

  • On January 16, two suicide bombers blew themselves up at the University of Maiduguri, in the capital of Nigeria's northeast Borno state. A professor and a child were killed, along with the bombers. Shekau later claimed responsibility for the attack.
  • On March 14, Boko Haram released a video that purported to show the execution of three men accused by the group of being spies for the Nigerian military. "These are your boys you sent," one militant said in the video, in a message directed at Nigeria's President Buhari, Reuters reported. One of the men was decapitated while the other two were shot.
  • On March 30, Boko Haram fighters loyal to Barnawi, the ISIS-appointed leader, abducted 18 girls in a raid on a village near the border with Cameroon. Most of the girls were under the age of 17, and community members speculated that they would become brides for the jihadis.
  • On June 7, suspected Boko Haram fighters launched a major attack on Maiduguri from several positions. The militants used anti-aircraft guns in one part of the city, while several suicide bombers detonated their devices in or around mosques in eastern Maiduguri, killing at least 10. Amnesty International described the incidents as the "bloodiest so far" of 2017.
  • On June 19, five female suicide bombers blew themselves up in a village near Maiduguri. One blew herself up near a mosque, killing seven others, while another detonated her device in a house, killing five, according to Reuters.

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About the writer


Conor is a staff writer for Newsweek covering Africa, with a focus on Nigeria, security and conflict.

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