New reports by an international aid organisation, Mercy
Corps, have revealed how Boko Haram insurgents use informal micro credit
schemes and promises of safety to recruit hundreds of youths and pupils as
fighters.
The beneficiaries, the reports funded by the Ford Foundation
added, received amounts ranging from N10,000 to N1m in order to buy
motorcycles, restock their trading stores and grow their small-scale
businesses.
The reports, presented on Thursday in Lagos, also
highlighted how repression from the military and access to interest-free
finance, among others, had perpetuated terrorism and elicited sympathy from communities
in the North.
However, the Lead Researcher and Global Director, Conflict
Management for Mercy Corps, Rebecca Wolfe, said many of the locals did not know
that the credits were from the insurgents.
The reports noted, “Roughly one out of three respondents had
completed secular secondary school and about the same number had completed some
sort of Islamic schooling.”
Titled, “Motivations and Empty Promises: Voices of former
Boko Haram combatants and Nigerian Youth and Gifts and Graft: How Boko Haram
uses Financial Services for Recruitment and Support,” the reports revealed that
peer pressure and the availability of girls were also incentives to the
beneficiaries.
According to Wolfe, 47 former members of the insurgent
groups, comprising 21 females and 26 males, 45 community members and seven
others, who refused the sect’s incentives were interviewed during the study.
She added, “Sometimes
the people did not know. It is usually something like a friend coming to give
them money for their business and they later find out that the friend is a
member of Boko Haram. I asked them, ‘Don’t you people know?’ But it turned out
that sometimes, they did not know what they were getting into.
“One male recipient shared how he was complaining to a
friend that he wanted a job so he could better provide for his parents. The
friend then liaised with Boko Haram leaders to secure a motorcycle to allow the
recipient start a business,” she said.
Meanwhile, the reports recommended that the government
should, in the post-conflict era, “increase the quality, availability and
diversity of financial services, particularly to youths with small, informal
businesses. Increase transparency and accessibility to government-led economic
programmes. Explore financial services to help youths achieve their ambitions,
among other interventions.”
A member of the team, Ballama Mustafa, who urged the
government to make its presence felt in remote communities in the region, added
that interventions should be interest-free and should not exclude locals, who
are not literate.
He added, “There are diverse paths to
membership. Some were abducted and some joined because they had friends who
were insurgents. Some joined to avenge the deaths of their family members or
friends. When the military invades a community after a terrorist attack, you
find that the military arrests people indiscriminately. But Boko Haram also
does that. When they go into a community, they can kill parents who have
prevented their children from joining them. One of our recommendations is that
communities and schools should create counter-narratives to dissuade youths and
pupils from joining the sect
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