Niger says it has picked up 1,400 Boko Haram followers

Niger says it has picked up 1,400 Boko Haram followers
Over a thousand followers of the extremist Boko Haram group have been captured by Niger forces as they fled from violence to Nigeria.
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Niger is facing a jihadist insurgency on its southwestern border with Mali [Getty/archive]

Nearly 1,400 followers of Nigeria's notorious Boko Haram jihadist group have been intercepted fleeing into Niger following clashes with a rival Islamic State group, according to the army.

The exodus into southeastern Niger started in March, when the Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) pursued Boko Haram in its forest hideout of Sambisa, northeastern Niger.

Niger's armed forces have so far picked up 1,397 people, many of them women and children, according to a statement from the army's southeastern region, seen by AFP.

They have been handed over to the Nigerian military authorities, it said.

"Around 30 terrorists" who refused to surrender were killed, it added.

Boko Haram launched a bloody campaign in northeastern Nigeria in 2009 that has left over 40,000 dead and displaced around two million from their homes, according to UN figures.

It became globally notorious in 2014 for abducting 276 schoolgirls in the town of Chibok, 96 of whom remain missing.

But the group split in 2016, giving birth to ISWAP, which now dominates in a fratricidal conflict.

The Boko Haram followers were trying to reach the marshlands of the vast Lake Chad region, whose islands have long been a bolthole for jihadists.

The movement was first spotted on March 7, as people walked along the Kamadougou Yoge River marking the border between the two countries.

Six days later, Nigerien troops in a regional anti-jihadist task force launched an operation that killed 20 militants and captured 83 others, according to the army.

The southeastern region of Diffa, which has born the brunt of militant attacks over the years, has been relatively calm since the start of 2023, a security source told AFP.

However, landmines sown by rebels continue to claim lives. Last month, seven soldiers died and nearly a dozen were wounded in blasts.

Niger, one of the poorest countries in the world, is also facing a jihadist insurgency on its southwestern border with Mali.