
In league with bandits — how a Boko Haram faction entrenched itself near Nigeria's capital
The Shiroro cell of a Boko Haram faction in Niger State, near Nigeria's capital Abuja, is the group's furthest and most successful expansion outside the Lake Chad Basin. Until now, information about the cell of the Jama'atu Ahlis Sunna Lidda'awati wal-Jihad (JAS) group sketched its existence, but left many questions unanswered.
New evidence from ongoing Institute for Security Studies (ISS) research includes interviews with defectors, local victims and women who escaped JAS after being married to some of its fighters. The information sheds light on the Shiroro cell's operations and alliances, and what they mean for counterterrorism in Nigeria.
Audiovisual material and corroborating reports show JAS embedded deeply in Niger State's forested communities, blending jihadism with local Fulani banditry – the main source of insecurity in the area. By tolerating the bandits' non-adherence to its strict religious code, JAS benefits from their weapons, fighters and knowledge of the local terrain, enabling the group to gain a strategic foothold in Central Nigeria.
The cell is led by Abubakar Saidu, alias Sadiku. A native Babur from Biu in Borno State, Sadiku was sent to Niger State in 2014 by late JAS leader Abubakar Shekau. He was part of a seven-man team directed to meet remaining members of the ultra-Salafist Darul Islam group. After being dislodged from its headquarters in Mokwa by a 2009 police raid, members had fled north into Nigeria's largely ungoverned forests.
Unlike the doctrinal and tighter command discipline of rival Boko Haram faction Iswap, JAS thrives on ideological fluidity and predation.
Although Darul Islam had earlier rejected Boko Haram's overture for alignment, Sadiku found fertile ground among its dispersed followers and started the Niger State cell along with his comrades from Borno. He began shuttling between Borno and Niger states, gradually embedding himself in the Alawa Forest Reserve area, and coordinating with the local Fulani. This culminated in escalating attacks by the group in 2021.
From forest camps like Kugu and Dogon Fili, the group attacks security forces and civilians in villages and towns, and on roads in the Shiroro, Munya and Rafi local government areas. It has killed hundreds, displaced thousands and planted many improvised explosive devices (IEDs).
A Premium Times investigation and ISS interviews reveal the abduction of boys who are forced into an indoctrination programme at Islamic schools, and forced labour. Women and girls are kidnapped and forced into marriages with fighters.
Strongholds of JAS' Shiroro cell in Niger State, Nigeria
Unlike the doctrinal and tighter command discipline of rival Boko Haram faction Islamic State West Africa Province's (Iswap), JAS thrives on ideological fluidity and predation. Militants raid villages, carrying out kidnapping and extortion, which they justify as 'fayhoo' (spoils taken from civilian 'unbelievers'). This flexibility appears key to its entrenchment in Niger State.
The Shiroro cell is not structured under the traditional Boko Haram command system, but under kachallas (warlords or strongmen), which shows an embracing of bandit terminology.
The fusion of jihadists and non-ideological armed criminals is not new. In Niger, Mali and Burkina Faso, jihadists have worked with local criminals for a stake in illegal gold mines. But the Shiroro cell's local integration stands out, especially its tolerance of the bandits' use of alcohol, drugs and prostitution, which contravene the cell's strict religious doctrine.
A woman formerly married to a fighter recalled Boko Haram clerics from North East Nigeria expressing disapproval, but Sadiku argued that the Fulani would 'change with time'. It is, however, doubtful whether the bandits would ever cooperate with jihadists out of religious conviction.
The Shiroro cell is not structured under the traditional Boko Haram command system, but under kachallas (warlords or strongmen), which shows an embracing of bandit terminology. Notorious bandit leader Dogo Gide served under Sadiku as kachalla before their fallout – though ISS interviews suggest that Bakura Doro, the Lake Chad-based overall commander of JAS, may be mediating a reconciliation.
According to defectors and women who lived in the camps, Doro supplies weapons from his base on Lake Chad's Barwa Island. One video, seen by ISS, shows weapons wrapped in grass and fish, hidden on boats bound for Shiroro.
This arms flow is complemented by locally sourced weapons, seized from security forces or trafficked through Sahelian smuggling networks, using the group's bandit alliances. Money also flows from Shiroro to Doro, underscoring how territorial expansion is a tactic to also finance terrorism.
The Shiroro cell is dispersed across forest communities, including Kugu, Maganda and Dogon Fili, to avoid detection by Nigeria's largely aerial military campaign. The military's ground assets were withdrawn after facing repeated deadly attacks.
Further complicating the situation is the Lakurawa, a Sahelian-rooted Fulani armed group designated a terrorist organisation by Nigeria in 2025. While espousing jihadism, Lakurawa is predatory and operates in northwestern Sokoto and Kebbi states along the Niger Republic border.
Geography amplifies the Shiroro threat… Arrests in July of Boko Haram-linked women heading to the Borgu axis suggest the cell is eyeing broader expansion.
According to a defector and an expert on the conflict, Lakurawa's emissaries have visited Sadiku in Shiroro annually since 2023, providing the first credible evidence of Lakurawa-JAS interactions and possible alignment. Sadiku sent fighters to reinforce Lakurawa, which in turn approached another notorious Fulani bandit leader, Bello Turji, ostensibly to replicate the JAS-style alliance in the country's North West.
The convergence of armed groups raises the threat of a wider coordination of violence. The 2022 Kuje prison attack in Abuja involved a rare Iswap-JAS-Ansaru collaboration. A defector who participated in the 2022 Kaduna train attack and kidnapping told ISS the assault was executed by Sadiku's fighters using IEDs from Borno, and partnering with bandits.
Meanwhile, Iswap has long sought to expand beyond Lake Chad, even targeting southern states like Oyo to access coastal west Africa. ISS research shows it sent five commanders with 25 fighters each to Central Nigeria in April, maintaining a presence in Kogi's Okene axis. Yet its success has been limited compared with JAS' Shiroro stronghold.
Geography amplifies the Shiroro threat. Niger State connects north and south Nigeria and borders Benin through porous forest corridors linking to the Sahel. Arrests in July of Boko Haram-linked women heading to the Borgu axis suggest the cell is eyeing broader expansion.
Yet, Nigeria's strategy to prevent and counter violent extremism remains largely Lake Chad-focused. The Shiroro case shows the need for a recalibrated threat map. Responses must include forest surveillance, road security and partnerships with local vigilantes under accountability frameworks. Finance routes must be disrupted and gender-responsive reintegration programmes must be run for defectors. DM

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Daily Maverick
2 days ago
- Daily Maverick
In league with bandits — how a Boko Haram faction entrenched itself near Nigeria's capital
New evidence shows how the JAS group's Shiroro cell adopts a flexible approach that tolerates local bandits and their vices. The Shiroro cell of a Boko Haram faction in Niger State, near Nigeria's capital Abuja, is the group's furthest and most successful expansion outside the Lake Chad Basin. Until now, information about the cell of the Jama'atu Ahlis Sunna Lidda'awati wal-Jihad (JAS) group sketched its existence, but left many questions unanswered. New evidence from ongoing Institute for Security Studies (ISS) research includes interviews with defectors, local victims and women who escaped JAS after being married to some of its fighters. The information sheds light on the Shiroro cell's operations and alliances, and what they mean for counterterrorism in Nigeria. Audiovisual material and corroborating reports show JAS embedded deeply in Niger State's forested communities, blending jihadism with local Fulani banditry – the main source of insecurity in the area. By tolerating the bandits' non-adherence to its strict religious code, JAS benefits from their weapons, fighters and knowledge of the local terrain, enabling the group to gain a strategic foothold in Central Nigeria. The cell is led by Abubakar Saidu, alias Sadiku. A native Babur from Biu in Borno State, Sadiku was sent to Niger State in 2014 by late JAS leader Abubakar Shekau. He was part of a seven-man team directed to meet remaining members of the ultra-Salafist Darul Islam group. After being dislodged from its headquarters in Mokwa by a 2009 police raid, members had fled north into Nigeria's largely ungoverned forests. Unlike the doctrinal and tighter command discipline of rival Boko Haram faction Iswap, JAS thrives on ideological fluidity and predation. Although Darul Islam had earlier rejected Boko Haram's overture for alignment, Sadiku found fertile ground among its dispersed followers and started the Niger State cell along with his comrades from Borno. He began shuttling between Borno and Niger states, gradually embedding himself in the Alawa Forest Reserve area, and coordinating with the local Fulani. This culminated in escalating attacks by the group in 2021. From forest camps like Kugu and Dogon Fili, the group attacks security forces and civilians in villages and towns, and on roads in the Shiroro, Munya and Rafi local government areas. It has killed hundreds, displaced thousands and planted many improvised explosive devices (IEDs). A Premium Times investigation and ISS interviews reveal the abduction of boys who are forced into an indoctrination programme at Islamic schools, and forced labour. Women and girls are kidnapped and forced into marriages with fighters. Strongholds of JAS' Shiroro cell in Niger State, Nigeria Unlike the doctrinal and tighter command discipline of rival Boko Haram faction Islamic State West Africa Province's (Iswap), JAS thrives on ideological fluidity and predation. Militants raid villages, carrying out kidnapping and extortion, which they justify as 'fayhoo' (spoils taken from civilian 'unbelievers'). This flexibility appears key to its entrenchment in Niger State. The Shiroro cell is not structured under the traditional Boko Haram command system, but under kachallas (warlords or strongmen), which shows an embracing of bandit terminology. The fusion of jihadists and non-ideological armed criminals is not new. In Niger, Mali and Burkina Faso, jihadists have worked with local criminals for a stake in illegal gold mines. But the Shiroro cell's local integration stands out, especially its tolerance of the bandits' use of alcohol, drugs and prostitution, which contravene the cell's strict religious doctrine. A woman formerly married to a fighter recalled Boko Haram clerics from North East Nigeria expressing disapproval, but Sadiku argued that the Fulani would 'change with time'. It is, however, doubtful whether the bandits would ever cooperate with jihadists out of religious conviction. The Shiroro cell is not structured under the traditional Boko Haram command system, but under kachallas (warlords or strongmen), which shows an embracing of bandit terminology. Notorious bandit leader Dogo Gide served under Sadiku as kachalla before their fallout – though ISS interviews suggest that Bakura Doro, the Lake Chad-based overall commander of JAS, may be mediating a reconciliation. According to defectors and women who lived in the camps, Doro supplies weapons from his base on Lake Chad's Barwa Island. One video, seen by ISS, shows weapons wrapped in grass and fish, hidden on boats bound for Shiroro. This arms flow is complemented by locally sourced weapons, seized from security forces or trafficked through Sahelian smuggling networks, using the group's bandit alliances. Money also flows from Shiroro to Doro, underscoring how territorial expansion is a tactic to also finance terrorism. The Shiroro cell is dispersed across forest communities, including Kugu, Maganda and Dogon Fili, to avoid detection by Nigeria's largely aerial military campaign. The military's ground assets were withdrawn after facing repeated deadly attacks. Further complicating the situation is the Lakurawa, a Sahelian-rooted Fulani armed group designated a terrorist organisation by Nigeria in 2025. While espousing jihadism, Lakurawa is predatory and operates in northwestern Sokoto and Kebbi states along the Niger Republic border. Geography amplifies the Shiroro threat… Arrests in July of Boko Haram-linked women heading to the Borgu axis suggest the cell is eyeing broader expansion. According to a defector and an expert on the conflict, Lakurawa's emissaries have visited Sadiku in Shiroro annually since 2023, providing the first credible evidence of Lakurawa-JAS interactions and possible alignment. Sadiku sent fighters to reinforce Lakurawa, which in turn approached another notorious Fulani bandit leader, Bello Turji, ostensibly to replicate the JAS-style alliance in the country's North West. The convergence of armed groups raises the threat of a wider coordination of violence. The 2022 Kuje prison attack in Abuja involved a rare Iswap-JAS-Ansaru collaboration. A defector who participated in the 2022 Kaduna train attack and kidnapping told ISS the assault was executed by Sadiku's fighters using IEDs from Borno, and partnering with bandits. Meanwhile, Iswap has long sought to expand beyond Lake Chad, even targeting southern states like Oyo to access coastal west Africa. ISS research shows it sent five commanders with 25 fighters each to Central Nigeria in April, maintaining a presence in Kogi's Okene axis. Yet its success has been limited compared with JAS' Shiroro stronghold. Geography amplifies the Shiroro threat. Niger State connects north and south Nigeria and borders Benin through porous forest corridors linking to the Sahel. Arrests in July of Boko Haram-linked women heading to the Borgu axis suggest the cell is eyeing broader expansion. Yet, Nigeria's strategy to prevent and counter violent extremism remains largely Lake Chad-focused. The Shiroro case shows the need for a recalibrated threat map. Responses must include forest surveillance, road security and partnerships with local vigilantes under accountability frameworks. Finance routes must be disrupted and gender-responsive reintegration programmes must be run for defectors. DM

TimesLIVE
5 days ago
- TimesLIVE
Iran executes two members of opposition group for attacking infrastructure
Iran executed two members of the banned Mujahideen-e-Khalq group for attacking civilian infrastructure with homemade projectiles, the judiciary news outlet Mizan said on Sunday, amid criticism from Amnesty International over a 'grossly unfair' trial. Mehdi Hassani and Behrouz Ehsani-Eslamloo, identified as 'operational elements' of the MEK, were sentenced to death in September 2024 — a verdict upheld by the Supreme Court, which denied their request for a retrial, Mizan said. 'The terrorists, in co-ordination with MEK leaders, had ... built launchers and hand-held mortars in line with the group's goals, fired projectiles heedlessly at citizens, homes, service and administrative facilities, educational and charity centres,' the report said. Maryam Rajavi, who leads the National Council of Resistance of Iran of which the MEK is the main force, paid tribute to the pair. 'Honour to these steadfast Mojahedin who, after three years of unwavering resistance under torture, pressure and threats, fulfilled their solemn pledge to God and the people with pride and dignity.' The defendants were indicted with 'moharebeh' — an Islamic term meaning waging war against God — destroying public property and 'membership in a terrorist organisation with the aim of disrupting national security'. Amnesty International said that Ehsani-Eslamloo and Hassani were arrested in 2022 and maintained their innocence during a trial which the rights group called 'grossly unfair and marred by allegations of torture and forced confessions'. 'According to informed sources, agents interrogated them without lawyers present and subjected them to torture and other ill-treatment, including beatings and prolonged solitary confinement, to extract self-incriminating statements,' it said in January. According to the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, the number of people executed in Iran rose to at least 901 in 2024, the highest number since 2015. The MEK, known in English as People's Mujahideen Organisation of Iran, was a powerful leftist-Islamist group that staged bombing campaigns against the shah's government and US targets in the 1970s but ultimately fell out with the other factions of the 1979 Islamic Revolution. Since then, the MEK has opposed the Islamic Republic and its leadership in exile has been Paris-based. The group was listed as a terrorist organisation by the US and the EU until 2012.

IOL News
24-07-2025
- IOL News
The impact of political appointments on the leadership crisis in the South African Police
A large group of uniformed police officers salute Appointment of national police commissioners based on political affinity, rather than professionalisation is among the caused of the leadership in the South African Police Service, according to experts. Picture: Supplied. Image: Supplied The appointment of individuals with no policing experience as national police commissioners in South Africa is among the causal factors contributing to the leadership crisis within the South African Police Service (SAPS). This was revealed during a recent webinar that looked at the leadership crisis in the SAPS and what should have been done to rectify the situation. It was co-hosted by the Institute for Security Studies (ISS), the Catholic Parliamentary Liaison Office (CIPLO), and the Hanns Seidel Foundation. At the centre of the discussion was the bombshell dropped by the KwaZulu-Natal provincial commissioner, Lieutenant General Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi, who accused the police minister and a deputy national commissioner of corruption. The Parliamentary and judicial inquiries, which are about to commence, relate to this crisis and a new police minister who will assume office in August. Gareth Newham, Head of Justice and Violence Prevention at the ISS, said the National Development Plan (NDP) back in 2011 identified a serial crises of the top leadership of the police. The NDP was adopted by the Cabinet in 2012. 'I think the main challenge has been that between the year 2000 and 2017, the people who were appointed as permanent national commissioners of the South African Police Service were not career police officers. 'They were not professional policemen or policewomen who had worked their way up through the ranks, who understood the nature of the challenge of policing in South Africa, had walked in boots, understood the difficulties that the men and women in blue face on a daily basis, what it's like to be in a command situation over a unit or a shift or to run a police station,' Newham said. Video Player is loading. Play Video Play Unmute Current Time 0:00 / Duration -:- Loaded : 0% Stream Type LIVE Seek to live, currently behind live LIVE Remaining Time - 0:00 This is a modal window. Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window. Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Window Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Dropshadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps Reset restore all settings to the default values Done Close Modal Dialog End of dialog window. Advertisement Next Stay Close ✕ He added that the individuals who were made national commissioners without being career police officers were appointed primarily, seemingly, because of their personal and political loyalties to whoever was the President of the time. Newham said it is important to leave it up to the police, who are the professionals, to look at the resources they have and come up with operational plans about how to address crime, to structure the organisation correctly, to make sure it has its functions working well and effectively in an efficient manner. 'The post, the National Commission of Police, is operational. They are the head of the department. They are the counting officer. According to the Police Act, they are supposed to give operational direction to the organisation. Whereas the minister, who is provided for in the Constitution, is the political head. 'So, we have elections, the governing party appoints the minister of police, and that police minister gives directives to the police, and primarily should be giving those directives in terms of policy and strategy,' he said. He said that the permanent national police commissioners who were not professional police officers were largely coming to that post with a political lens, their focus was not on what good and necessary for the police and the public. Instead, they focused on what served their political aims, which is actually the job of the minister. 'And this is why you often see conflict between the minister and the National Commissioner. Both are appointed by the president, both believe they are responsible to the president for what they do, and can only be fired by the President. And so that has always led to conflict between the National Commissioner and the police, as seen back then between Riah Phiyega, who conflicted with then Minister Nathi Nhleko. 'We also saw Bheki Cele as the National Commissioner being in conflict as well with Minister Nathi Mthethwa at some point. When Cele became the minister, he was then in conflict with the National Commissioner, Khehla Sitole, and that's where the root of this high-level serial crises, because of course, the commissioner appoints people, and the police minister wants their people in,' Newham said. He added that this has resulted in a lot of mistrust, a lot of working against each other, and a lot of trying to undermine each other. Newham said this is an issue of leadership that promotes a specific ethos that characterises the organisational culture in which the men and women who have to serve the public are invested, take pride in, and are supported to promote. 'We really need to strengthen our (SAPS) internal and external accountability mechanisms, so that when police officers who are engaged in corruption or crime, or various kinds of misconduct, that we can identify them, and if it's corrective counselling they need in order to just guide them on the right path, we do that effectively,' Newham said. Professor Sandy Africa, Research Director of the Mapungubwe Institute for Strategic Reflection (MISTRA), said in many cases, there have been appointments made, seemingly based on political affinity, rather than professionalisation. She added that there is an element of managerialism in the SAPS. 'It was assumed for quite a long time that all that was needed were the skills of management. And so you had, for example, former police commissioner Jackie Selebi, who had been quite successful as the director-general in the Department of Foreign Affairs, without policing experience, of course, he had the background of having been in the trenches in the past, in the uMkhonto weSizwe. 'It was assumed that the level of exposure to a kind of security environment, coupled with the managerial experience that had been accumulated over time, would probably be sufficient. And it turned out not to be. And again, and again, in the case of others, it seems to have been a mistake that just repeated itself,' Africa said. She added that even when someone from the private sector was brought in to the SAPS at a senior level (not as a commissioner) for a short period, on the assumption that he would deal with the problems, however, they could not be sorted out. She said over the last couple of years, at the very least, professional police have been given the opportunity. Africa highlighted that it is the problem of the entire public service to assume that managerialism is all that is needed. Asked whether the country was starting to see police officers, defence officials, actually entering the political sphere, she said what's happening at the moment shouldn't be misdiagnosed. 'I think this is, in fact, symptomatic of the high levels of trust or mistrust, and the kind of breakdown. So, all I am seeing is the fact that there's conflict between senior officials and within the departments, between the ministers and senior officials, and sometimes even between ministers, as you saw, in the July 2021 unrest, where even the ministers were at loggerheads with each other. 'The conditions actually are, I suppose, such that with the breakdown of authority, of trust, of systems, it's enterprising that these pronouncements are made, just because the very senior officials don't seem to trust them sufficiently, and I think this is the crisis that we are facing,' Africa said. Cardinal Stephen Brislin, President of the Southern African Catholic Bishops' Conference, said we are so used to having these sorts of scandals that there is a danger that is not taken seriously enough. 'The police services are there for the protection of people to protect their rights, to protect life itself, to protect resources, and to give recourse for people to justice, so that people may access justice. And when there is a breakdown, as has been alleged, this really breaks the very fabric of society,' he said. 'There are many good men and women in the police services, and we truly appreciate what they do and the integrity they have, but we also appreciate the suffering and the pain that they must be going through because of all this turmoil within the security forces,' he said. 'In this case, it is just very, very important that we know what the findings of the commission are. This investigator Commission, which we understand how they assess the allegations and who is implicated in any wrongdoing. And we also need to see action being taken about this. It cannot just be left to dwindle and nothing actually happens because that will simply ensure that the problems will continue into the future and that things will deteriorate even further,' Brislin said. He added that the church can become a very important voice in this process, together with other organisations and civil society.