The Prague Post - Nigeria, Sahel militants embrace DIY drone warfare

EUR -
AED 4.241451
AFN 80.076356
ALL 98.400168
AMD 439.205208
ANG 2.066938
AOA 1057.907952
ARS 1365.09794
AUD 1.775655
AWG 2.078858
AZN 1.96742
BAM 1.960734
BBD 2.315366
BDT 140.132627
BGN 1.962119
BHD 0.435595
BIF 3414.139085
BMD 1.154921
BND 1.475176
BOB 7.924008
BRL 6.394913
BSD 1.146715
BTN 98.114895
BWP 15.35203
BYN 3.752808
BYR 22636.455958
BZD 2.303436
CAD 1.577085
CDF 3322.707691
CHF 0.94131
CLF 0.028113
CLP 1078.822976
CNY 8.307692
CNH 8.291445
COP 4826.854658
CRC 582.606416
CUC 1.154921
CUP 30.605412
CVE 110.543169
CZK 24.772021
DJF 204.2074
DKK 7.459613
DOP 67.654932
DZD 150.704782
EGP 57.408365
ERN 17.323818
ETB 156.49649
FJD 2.593664
FKP 0.851994
GBP 0.85135
GEL 3.164433
GGP 0.851994
GHS 11.811825
GIP 0.851994
GMD 81.422044
GNF 9936.347781
GTQ 8.812175
GYD 240.587493
HKD 9.064948
HNL 29.925117
HRK 7.540826
HTG 150.394962
HUF 400.99208
IDR 18735.247561
ILS 4.125916
IMP 0.851994
INR 98.863572
IQD 1502.232218
IRR 48622.183982
ISK 143.649285
JEP 0.851994
JMD 183.382575
JOD 0.818856
JPY 166.117521
KES 149.139244
KGS 100.997543
KHR 4601.779056
KMF 494.885884
KPW 1039.407955
KRW 1563.428877
KWD 0.353371
KYD 0.955638
KZT 584.059946
LAK 24751.713383
LBP 102748.132807
LKR 342.788523
LRD 229.349116
LSL 20.437297
LTL 3.410182
LVL 0.698601
LYD 6.26593
MAD 10.543248
MDL 19.775276
MGA 5193.338222
MKD 61.714496
MMK 2424.543995
MNT 4134.146537
MOP 9.27083
MRU 45.343242
MUR 52.537386
MVR 17.791587
MWK 2006.098664
MXN 21.879584
MYR 4.881269
MZN 73.857492
NAD 20.442969
NGN 1773.786062
NIO 42.197647
NOK 11.564659
NPR 156.994934
NZD 1.913388
OMR 0.444078
PAB 1.146685
PEN 4.196407
PGK 4.717033
PHP 64.319886
PKR 323.845836
PLN 4.263617
PYG 9150.183809
QAR 4.182324
RON 5.033128
RSD 117.282075
RUB 92.680218
RWF 1627.193263
SAR 4.3326
SBD 9.636525
SCR 16.695427
SDG 693.534938
SEK 10.961848
SGD 1.479396
SHP 0.907587
SLE 25.437121
SLL 24218.120819
SOS 655.388932
SRD 43.129952
STD 23904.537526
SVC 10.034598
SYP 15016.255
SZL 20.401043
THB 37.523157
TJS 11.467356
TMT 4.042224
TND 3.41359
TOP 2.704941
TRY 45.402754
TTD 7.783722
TWD 33.894743
TZS 2973.923249
UAH 47.602271
UGX 4112.383934
USD 1.154921
UYU 47.509965
UZS 14533.69817
VES 115.739507
VND 30068.374024
VUV 138.40074
WST 3.171994
XAF 657.651763
XAG 0.032153
XAU 0.000344
XCD 3.121233
XDR 0.817879
XOF 657.628928
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.050653
ZAR 20.629948
ZMK 10395.677883
ZMW 28.410985
ZWL 371.884162
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

Nigeria, Sahel militants embrace DIY drone warfare
Nigeria, Sahel militants embrace DIY drone warfare / Photo: Audu MARTE - AFP

Nigeria, Sahel militants embrace DIY drone warfare

Under the cover of darkness, the jihadists moved into Wulgo, where the shores of Lake Chad meet the arid countryside of northern Nigeria.

Text size:

Around 1:00 am, a "barrage" of rocket-propelled grenades was fired, sending Cameroonian troops, stationed there as part of an anti-jihadist coalition, into "disarray", a security source told AFP.

While the militants had disguised themselves in a nearby town as herders coming into the weekly market, they also might have had another advantage, according to an intelligence report seen by AFP: the use of armed drones.

The Tuesday morning attack, which sources said killed 25 Cameroonian troops in one of the region's deadliest incidents in recent months, comes as armed groups in west Africa turn towards the use of cheap, recreational drones -- modified into deadly, explosives-laden killers from above.

Armed groups in Nigeria and the Sahel have long used drones for surveillance and filming propaganda, but a shift is under way as jihadists and separatists kit them out for attacks.

"It's an available, at-reach technology, and it's easier and easier to use, and it's cheaper and cheaper," Wassim Nasr, researcher at the Soufan Center and journalist at France24, said. "It was only a matter of time before it arrived into the Sahel region and Nigeria."

In a major three-day battle in Mali in July, Tuareg separatists used drones against Russian paramilitary and Malian armed forces, analysts observed. In February, the rebels said they used a drone to down an army helicopter, though the military disputed the incident.

Meanwhile, jihadist groups in Mali and Burkina Faso have claimed to use drones equipped to drop grenades from above, as well as explosive-laden "suicide drones" that crash into targets, according to conflict analysis group WAMAPS.

Late last year, a drone attack wounded five soldiers at Nigeria's Wajirko base, in the northeast, battered from years of insurgency from Boko Haram and Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) fighters.

In January, soldiers at another base shot down drones hovering above them.

The South Africa-based Institute for Security Studies recently warned that "use of armed drones in battlefield operations is a dangerous new phase in ISWAP's insurgency".

In a sign of the military's own caution, drones were banned in northeast Nigeria in December.

- 'Spreading around the Sahel' -

Charlie Werb, an analyst with Alert:24, a risk consultancy, said over the past year he had noticed an increase in claims and reports of jihadists in the Sahel using drones, with a noted uptick since January.

"It's a pretty stark contrast," he told AFP.

"Every week or month this year, I've seen evidence of these drones spreading around the Sahel," he said, though he added that their use had been inconsistent and at times "rudimentary".

Nasr warned against drones being labelled a "game changer", adding that having a drone available "does not mean it will be properly used".

The continued reluctance of some jihadist groups to modify their surveillance drones for attack purposes, he added, suggests that drones are still relatively difficult to come by in the region, even as globalisation has eased their spread.

- Shifting skies -

For those on the receiving end, however, the drones have become a deadly addition to the militants' arsenals.

"The destruction on the base is massive. It is completely burnt along with military vehicles," said Muhammad Sani Umar, a nearby resident who visited the site of the Wulgo attack.

The incident was claimed by the Islamic State group, though local sources suggested Boko Haram might have been responsible based on their observations of the suspected militants.

The Nigerian military did not respond to requests for comment. The Cameroonian military said 12 of its soldiers were killed.

The use of drones by jihadists and separatists also heralds a shift in the air dominance by regional militaries -- which was itself marked by hundreds of civilian deaths at the hand of military-grade UAVs, notably in Mali, Burkina Faso and Nigeria.

As the skies above shift, Burkina junta leader Ibrahim Traore has been spotted at public events with a security detail that includes soldiers with anti-drone equipment, Werb noted.

But deficits remain: Major General Godwin Mutkut, who heads a multi-national coalition fighting jihadists in the Lake Chad region, noted at a coalition gathering in January that there was a general lack of anti-drone equipment among member countries.

That could pose problems if militants in the region -- largely confined to the countryside in recent years -- make renewed attempts to push into cities, where drones would potentially be "a core component... to changing their level of threat," Werb said.

U.Pospisil--TPP