LAGOS, Nigeria Islamic
extremists said Tuesday they killed more than 40 troops from a multinational
force in an attack on a convoy in northeast Nigeria – the fourth attack in
three days following a lull as Nigeria’s home-grown insurgency confronts a
leadership struggle.
Analysts are warning that the struggle could lead to more
violent attacks that will kill more people in a 7-year-old Islamic uprising
started by Boko Haram that has killed more than 20,000 people, forced 2.6
million from their homes and spread to neighboring states.
The Islamic State’s West Africa Province annihilated “a convoy
of the African Coalition Crusader forces” in the town of Malam Fatori, the SITE
Intelligence Group reported, translating an IS communique posted on social
media. There was no way to independently verify the claim and no word from
Nigeria’s military late Tuesday night.
Eighteen people were killed Sunday and Monday when insurgents
ambushed another convoy, gunned down Christians leaving a Sunday church service
and beheaded a village head and his son.
No one has claimed responsibility for the earlier attacks.
Tuesday’s was the first Nigeria attack claimed by the IS group
since August, when it named a new caliph in Nigeria and provoked a struggle
with the longtime leader of Boko Haram, Abubakar Shekau.
Shekau pledged Boko Haram’s allegiance to the Islamic State in
2015, giving it its first sub-Saharan franchise. Islamic State said it replaced
Shekau in August, in a dispute that revolved around his indiscriminate killings
of Muslims.
Many more Muslims than Christians have been killed in attacks
targeting mosques, churches, marketplaces and schools.
Tuesday’s Islamic State communique did not say when the convoy
was attacked but claimed it “resulted in killing more than forty and wounding
dozens” of troops from Nigeria and neighboring countries. The multi-national
force is also battling Nigeria’s home-grown Islamic insurgents who have spread
their extremist uprising to Chad, Cameroon and Niger.
Analysts from IHS Jane’s Terrorism and Insurgency Centre warned
the recent lull and drop in fatalities likely will be followed by increased
cross-border attacks.
In the leadership struggle, Shekau has reverted to the old name
for his group, Jama’atu Ahlis Sunna Lidda’awati wal-Jihad, meaning “People
Committed to the Propagation of the Prophet’s Teachings and Jihad.” They are
commonly called Boko Haram, a nickname that means “Western education is
forbidden or evil.”

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