Boko Haram killed 6,644 people in 2014
While they didn’t grab global headlines, they’re part of an even more deadly problem than that posed by ISIS’ Middle-Eastern core. Even as we published this story, it remained unclear whether or not the attack on the Radisson Blu Hotel in Mali’s capital, Bamako, was undertaken by Boko Haram or Ansar Al-Din.
The Institute for Economics and Peaces’ new Global Terrorism Index shows that the Nigerian terrorist group eclipsed ISIS for the morbid title of most deadly terrorist group in 2014, killing 6,644 people in various attacks throughout Nigeria, Chad, and Cameroon.
Together, the two groups (which declared an alliance in March) accounted for more than half of all deaths caused by terrorism last year.
Here are the grisly numbers behind Boko Haram’s rise in 2014.
Though ISIS claimed more total lives than Boko Haram did in 2014, ISIS killed less people through terrorist attacks against civilians, since most of their kills were battle-related deaths.
Boko Haram killed 45 more people in terrorist attacks in Nigeria alone than ISIS did across five countries.
In May,
members of Boko Haram killed 315 people at a marketplace in the town of Gomoru
Ngala, using both firearms and explosives. It was the third largest terrorist
attack reported globally in 2014, behind two major ISIS attacks in Iraq.
This increase was the largest year-on-year increase in terrorist deaths for any country in history. Amnesty International estimates that Boko Haram has now killed more than 17,000 people in total
No comments:
Post a Comment