by Clifford D. May
Last week, more than a hundred
Nigerian students, girls between the ages of 15 and 18, were kidnapped by the
al-Qaida-affiliated terrorists of Boko Haram. Most of the girls are still being
held. That should be a big story, don't you think?
Few major-league journalists do. The
U.N. has not been moved to rhetoric, much less action. American and European
feminists have not mobilized. As I write this, the abductions are not featured
on the websites of Amnesty
International or Human
Rights Watch. "In the
News" on the Congressional Black Caucus website one finds instead: "Black
lawmakers appeal to Pentagon over hairstyle ban."
What is the explanation for such
widespread lack of interest? Is it because Africa -- including Nigeria, the
continent's most populous country with what this year became its largest economy
-- seems remote? Is it because those who have declared the "Global War on
Terrorism" over are loath to call attention to yet another active battlefield?
Is it because acknowledging that self-declared Islamic jihadists are persecuting
"infidels" in a growing list of countries would shatter the fashionable,
multicultural Western worldview?
Some details of the attack: In the
wee hours of April 14, a convoy of about 60 trucks and motorcycles arrived at
the Government Girls Secondary School in Chibok, Borno State, in northeastern
Nigeria.
Boko Haram has long been active in
this area. Indeed, in early March there had been a statewide school closure
because of the threat posed by this Islamist terrorist group, whose name means
"Western education is forbidden." In recent days, however, schools reopened to
allow students to take examinations and earn certificates that would make it
easier for them to find jobs.
According to some reports, the
terrorists were disguised as soldiers. They told the students, mostly
Christians, that they were in danger and must leave their dormitories quickly,
and that the trucks would take them to safety. According to other reports, the
students were forcibly herded into the vehicles after a gun battle with school
security guards, two of whom were killed.
The motorcyclists accompanying the
trucks into the bush prevented the girls from jumping out. A few managed to
escape after the vehicles in which they were riding broke down.
As I write this, it appears that
between 20 and 40 of the 107 kidnapped girls managed to get away.
What are the terrorists doing with
those still held captive? Enslaving them. They will make them cook and clean,
and perhaps provide sexual services. A Nigerian Christian girl abducted by Boko
Haram last November told Reuters that she had been forced to convert to Islam
and had been used "as bait to attract enemies," who were then killed.
Also last week, Boko Haram claimed
responsibility for a bomb attack that slaughtered more than 70 people at a bus
station in Abuja, the Nigerian capital. That act of terrorism received scant
international attention as well.
Since its founding in 2002, Boko
Haram has been responsible for thousands of murders. Schools have been preferred
targets, along with churches. There also have been attacks against mosques whose
clerics and worshippers were considered insufficiently sympathetic to the
jihadist cause. In 2011, Boko Haram suicide-bombed a U.N. compound in Abuja as
well.
Nevertheless, the prevailing
narrative on the Left is that the conflict stems from poverty and inequality
rather than Islamist ideology and a lust for power.
"The Nigerian state has, by and
large, failed its population," writes
Simon Allison of Britain's Guardian newspaper. "It may be awash in oil wealth,
but none of that trickles down into the population, which has yet to see much in
the way of material benefits from an independent Nigeria. Who wouldn't be
looking for an alternative?"
His perspective is ahistorical. As
The New York Times' West Africa bureau chief in the mid-1980s, I spent a fair
amount of time in Nigeria. Despite poverty, Muslims and Christians generally got
along, and what sectarian tensions arose rarely turned violent. If anything, the
Muslim north of the country seemed safer than the chaotic Christian south.
What changed? For one, a determined
campaign of Islamic radicalization, funded largely by Saudis and Iranians.
Allison laments that Nigerian
President Goodluck Jonathan has "abandoned any form of diplomacy." Ah yes, if
only Nigerian diplomats would sit down with the slave drivers of teenage
schoolgirls and discuss their grievances all this unpleasantness could be
amicably settled. Perhaps British and American diplomats should be inviting
al-Qaida's leaders to join them for talks in Vienna as well.
They could, for example, reach out to
Nasir al-Wuhayshi, No.2 of al-Qaida's global operations. He has recently been
seen in a video
broadcast on jihadist websites of a high-level al-Qaida meeting in Yemen.
Addressing his comrades, he makes clear that his organization's goal is to
strike the U.S. again. "We must eliminate the cross," he says, referencing what
he sees as Christian power. He adds: "The bearer of the cross is
America."
Boko Haram is proud to be one of
al-Qaida's African franchises, along with al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb and
Al-Shabaab in Somalia.
"We are together with al-Qaida," Boko
Haram spokesman Abu Qaqa told reporters in Nigeria by phone last November. "They
are promoting the cause of Islam, just as we are doing. Therefore they help us
in our struggle and we help them, too."
Boko Haram's leader, Abubakar Shekau,
has vowed
that it will not be long before his organization can "comfortably confront the
United States of America." Most analysts regard that as bluster. On the other
hand, getting a few terrorists from Nigeria into the U.S. is not an
extraordinarily complicated project. And it is made easier when the watchdogs
aren't watching.
Clifford D. May is president of the
Foundation for Defense of Democracies, a policy institute focusing on national
security, and a foreign affairs columnist for The Washington
Times.
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_opinion.php?id=8143
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
No comments:
Post a Comment