They used to arouse less suspicion, though that may be changing
BOKO HARAM has used more female suicide-bombers than any other terrorist group in history. Of the 434 bombers the group deployed between April 2011 and June 2017, 244 have been definitely identified as female. More may have been. The Tamil Tigers, the previous holders of the gruesome record, used 44 over a decade, according to a study by Jason Warner and Hilary Matfess for the Combating Terrorism Center at West Point, an American military college. Boko Haram, whose insurgency has killed more than 30,000 in north-east Nigeria and neighbouring countries since 2011 and displaced 2.1m, is also the first group to use a majority of female bombers.
BOKO HARAM has used more female suicide-bombers than any other terrorist group in history. Of the 434 bombers the group deployed between April 2011 and June 2017, 244 have been definitely identified as female. More may have been. The Tamil Tigers, the previous holders of the gruesome record, used 44 over a decade, according to a study by Jason Warner and Hilary Matfess for the Combating Terrorism Center at West Point, an American military college. Boko Haram, whose insurgency has killed more than 30,000 in north-east Nigeria and neighbouring countries since 2011 and displaced 2.1m, is also the first group to use a majority of female bombers.
Nigeria’s government likes to say that Boko
Haram has been “technically defeated”. It split into two factions last year,
after Islamic State (IS) declared a preference for a more moderate leader, Abu
Musab al-Barnawi, over Abubakar Shekau. The latter’s tactics include using
suicide-bombers to blow up mosques and markets, inevitably killing fellow
Muslims. (Some analysts dispute the idea of factions, arguing that Boko Haram
has always been made up of different cells.) The group is far from vanquished,
even though it has been forced out of towns since Muhammadu Buhari, a former
military dictator, reclaimed the presidency in 2015. In July the branch
affiliated to IS killed 69 members of an oil-exploration team. Indeed the
group’s suicide-bombings have been especially lethal this year, after a
relative lull in 2016. During a period of just over seven weeks from June 1st
they killed at least 170 people, according to Reuters, a news agency. The
jihadists are sending more children to their death too: the UN has counted 83
used as human bombs this year, four times the total for 2016. Two-thirds of
them were girls.
The suicide-bombers sent by Boko Haram are,
however, less lethal than those used by other groups, say Mr Warner and Ms
Matfess. This is partly because around a fifth detonate their explosives when
confronted by soldiers, killing only themselves. Yet still the group sends
attackers to Maiduguri, the city where the insurgency began, to target the
university, markets and camps for the displaced. It is no coincidence that its
use of female bombers rose sharply after the kidnapping of the 276 “Chibok
Girls” from their school in April 2014. Boko Haram realised the propaganda
value of women: the use of supposed innocents as lethal weapons has a powerful
shock factor. They arouse less suspicion (at least they did when the tactic was
first deployed, if no longer) and can more easily hide bombs underneath
voluminous hijab. And by sending women to blow themselves up, Boko
Haram also saves its male fighters for more conventional guerrilla-style attacks.
Some of the women may by willing, if
brainwashed, jihadists. Many, though, are believed to be coerced into strapping
on bombs. One did so with a baby on her back. Some may see it as a way out of
an abusive life as one of Boko Haram’s “wives”, plenty of whom are raped by
their “husbands”. Those who give themselves up before detonating their bombs
often face a lifetime of stigma, as families and communities prove unwilling to
take them back. So whether the women kill anyone or not, Boko Haram sows fear
and division, exactly as it intends.
Source: The Economist
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