From Gatestone Institute <[email protected]>
Subject 'Nobody Talks About It': Jihadi Terrorists Continue to Ravage Africa
Date November 7, 2024 10:17 AM
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** 'Nobody Talks About It': Jihadi Terrorists Continue to Ravage Africa ([link removed])
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by Uzay Bulut • November 7, 2024 at 5:00 am
* According to reports, since 2009, Muslims, inspired by Boko Haram, have murdered more than 150,000 Christians in Nigeria.
* Chad, Libya, Sudan, the Central African Republic, Cameroon, Nigeria and Niger all struggle with jihadist insurgencies.
* "The persistent and growing strength of violent extremist organizations in the Sahel threatens to exacerbate the humanitarian crisis and spread instability across Africa, posing significant security and financial risks to the United States and Europe. The continuing collapse of international counterterrorism support, as well as weakening leadership in regional efforts, has created a vacuum in which violent extremism can expand." — Council on Foreign Relations, October 23, 2024.
* The ongoing civil war in Sudan between the Sudanese Armed Forces and the Rapid Support Forces, for example, poses a serious threat to Chad's stability. As Sudan's civil war escalates, it fuels further turmoil in the region.
* "The conflict, which has spread to 14 of the 18 states in Sudan, has killed and wounded tens of thousands of civilians, displaced nearly 8 million people and forced two million more to flee to neighboring countries." — UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, September 6, 2024.
* The civil war in Sudan has driven around 700,000 refugees into Chad, creating a humanitarian crisis and impeding trade between the two countries.
* "Unless there is a coordinated effort to implement comprehensive political, economic, and social reforms alongside military campaigns against Boko Haram, the extremist group's ideology is likely to continue to gain ground." — Open Doors, March 2024.
* As a result of jihadi violence by terror groups in sub-Saharan Africa, 16.2 million Christians have been forcibly displaced. An Open Doors report quotes Pastor Barnabas, who lives in a displaced persons camp in Nigeria: "Millions of Christians are displaced, here in Nigeria. Millions of Christians are displaced in Africa. The news doesn't care about it, politicians don't talk about it, governments don't talk about it, global politics don't talk about it. Nobody talks about it."
* "Who is funding these groups? Who is arming and enabling them to the extent that they are more powerful than the forces of sovereign states? What powerful and monied entities are supporting the advance of jihad in Africa?" — Robert Spencer, director of Jihad Watch, October 27, 2024.

Chad, Libya, Sudan, the Central African Republic, Cameroon, Nigeria and Niger all struggle with jihadist insurgencies. The civil war in Sudan has driven around 700,000 refugees into Chad, creating a humanitarian crisis and impeding trade between the two countries. Pictured: The Ourang refugee camp in Adre, Chad, inhabited by refugees who fled the civil war in Sudan, photographed on December 7, 2023. (Photo by Denis Sassou Gueipeur/AFP via Getty Images)

While much of the world media and human rights groups are fixated on the war being waged on Israel by Iran and its Hamas/Hezbollah/Houthi proxies, Islamic jihadist terrorists continue to ravage Africa.

At least 40 Chadian soldiers were killed in a terrorist attack on October 26-27 on a military base in Chad's Lake Region, according to a government statement that blamed the attack on the jihadist Boko Haram group. Reuters added:

"Chad is an important ally for French and U.S. forces aiming to fight jihadists in the Sahel, which has become the epicentre of global terrorism under attack by factions loyal to al Qaeda and Islamic State."

The area around Lake Chad, which lies along the borders of Chad, Nigeria, Cameroon and Niger, is targeted by Islamist insurgencies -- by the Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) and Boko Haram -- which began a terror campaign in northeast Nigeria in 2009 and spread to Chad.

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