Military Opens Camp to Rehabilitate Boko Haram
Nigeria's military has opened a camp to rehabilitate Boko Haram
fighters who have surrendered and are repentant, according to a
statement Wednesday that urged other fighters to abandon the Islamic
insurgency that has claimed 20,000 lives in six years.
The military also said it has rescued 11,595 civilian hostages in
attacks on Boko
Haram camps and villages in the northeast of the West
African nation since Feb. 26.
The rehabilitation camp will provide vocational training to help former
fighters contribute meaningfully to economic growth, Defense Ministry
spokesman Brig. Gen. Rabe Abubakar said in a statement. He gave few
details and did not say how many fighters have surrendered. Previous statements
said dozens of Boko Haram members have given themselves up this year
and that many appeared emaciated and begged for food. That would
indicate that the military is succeeding in cutting supply routes of the
insurgency that has spread to neighboring countries.
Abubakar's statement appealed for other fighters to surrender and warned
"the final onslaught against the remnant group of the terrorists would
continue unabated and would not relent until the power of evil forces in
the northeast is completely neutralized."
Analysts have said Nigeria's military does not have the capacity to hold
the vast territory, and that while it may curb Boko Haram's uprising,
low-level attacks likely will continue with suicide bombings of soft
targets and deadly raids on remote villages. Government efforts to
return some of the 2.8 million refugees forced from their homes by the
insurgency have been stymied because the refugees say their areas are
not safe from Boko Haram. Abubakar did not say what has happened to a DE-radicalization and
rehabilitation program set up in at least two prisons by the previous
administration of President Goodluck Jonathan, who lost 2015 elections to Muhammadu Buhari.
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