Hundreds of Boko
Haram members stayed at training camps with Malian militants for months in
Timbuktu, learning to fix Kalashnikovs and launch shoulder-fired weapons, a
report has said.
The Nigerians fled
the city into the desert, along with the other militants, days before a French
airstrike on January 20, American newspaper Wall Street Journal reported.
A man who said he
was hired to cook for the militants said the Boko Haram members trained for
about 10 months at what is now a bombed-out customs-police building on
Timbuktu’s desert fringe, intermingling with a local al Qaeda offshoot called
Ansar Dine.
“Every day I saw
people coming here, saying they want to sign up,” said the man, whose
description of the militants’ activities matched those offered by four
neighbours.
The Wall Street
Journal quoted locals as saying that until just a few weeks ago, the bombed-out
customs-police building in Timbuktu was one of bustling training centers
populated not only by local al Qaeda-linked militants but also by hundreds of
Boko Haram members.
Well over 200
Nigerians arrived in Timbuktu in April 2012 in about 300 cars, the cook said,
after al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) swept into the city.
Residents said
about 50 Boko Haram militants lived and trained at the customs building, and 50
more lived in an annex across a giant sandy lot, while others took up in other
abandoned government buildings.
The presence of
Nigerian trainees in Mali confirms statements earlier made by authorities that
some Boko Haram fighters trained in Mali.
Last year, a senior
security chief gave a briefing in which he said Nigeria was going to Mali
primarily to uproot the Boko Haram training facilities.
Also, Chief of Army
Staff Lt-General Azubuike Ihejirika said last month that Boko Haram received
training in Mali, making it imperative for Nigerian troops to join the
international campaign to free northern Mali from militants.
Running a war
college
The Wall Street
Journal report quoted neighbours as saying that in Timbuktu, AQIM ran a
sophisticated war college from several abandoned buildings. Judging by locals’
accounts of the training, this was where Boko Haram militants gained skills to
allow them to expand beyond their typical quick-hit bomb strikes.
On dunes just west
of the customs house, Boko Haram fighters fired shoulder-fired arms, the cook
and four neighbors said—though it couldn’t be determined if they were
describing sophisticated rockets or more rudimentary mortars. In its Nigeria
attacks, Boko Haram appears not to have used shoulder-mounted weapons.
Within a week of
the foreign militants’ arrival, the al Qaeda-backed groups began offering jobs
to locals. A gunman came to the cook’s door, looking for someone fluent in the
Hausa language—which the cook had learned in Kumasi, a trading town in Ghana
with a large Hausa population. They paid him about N3,000 a day, he said, to
cook for Ansar Dine and Boko Haram.
A restaurateur said
he sometimes brought tubs of couscous and spaghetti to the training camp, but
said the Boko Haram fighters didn’t extend much courtesy to locals. “They are
extremely rude,” said the restaurateur, adding: “They pay whatever price you
want.”
On a typical day,
after rising before dawn to pray and read the Quran, the militants ran five
laps around the sand-choked lot, the size of several football fields, said the
cook and neighbors who witnessed the exercises. After push-ups in the sand, the
militants ate a breakfast of bread and powdered milk.
They then met with
specialists, the cook said. He described an arms specialist from Pakistan, who
he said taught Boko Haram and Ansar Dine members how to break apart and
reassemble assault rifles, over and over again. There was a computer specialist
who appeared, to the cook, to be mostly occupied making fliers extolling the
fundamentalist cause. A heavy arms specialist who the cook said was from
Afghanistan told
militants how to breathe steadily when firing a shoulder-mounted rocket.
“Swear to God,
every day, new people, they come,” said Moulhar Arby, a girl in the
earthen-wall house next door to the customs office. “Nobody knows how they come
here.”
Commanders from
Boko Haram and Ansar Dine gave newcomers 4,000 West African CFA, the local
equivalent of N1,250, to enlist, the cook said. After training, he said,
recruits were given about N4,700—their first taste of money following months of
sharing bathrooms with scores of militants.
Days before the
French bomb hollowed out the customs building, the Nigerians sneaked away,
neighbors said. Every night, a few came back to toggle the lights, these people
said, presumably to convey to surveillance planes above that Boko Haram was
still in Timbuktu, the report said.
Source: Daily Trust
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