Nigerian troops on new offensive against Islamists 
4:18pm BST
By Ibrahim Mshelizza and Emma Ande
MAIDUGURI/YOLA, Nigeria (Reuters) - Nigeria launched a military 
campaign on Wednesday to flush Islamist militants out of their bases in 
remote border areas, after President Goodluck Jonathan declared a state 
of emergency in the northeast.
Nigerian troops deployed in large numbers, part of a plan to rout an 
insurgency by the Boko Haram Islamist group that has seized control of 
parts of the region.
"The operations, which will involve massive deployment of men and 
resources, are aimed at asserting the nation's territorial integrity," 
Defence Headquarters said in a statement.
The campaign targets semi-desert areas of the three states in which 
Jonathan declared an emergency on Tuesday - Borno, Adamawa and Yobe, 
three of the poorest and most remote in the country.
The Islamist insurgency has cost thousands of lives and destabilised 
Africa's top energy producer since it began in 2009, but it has mostly 
happened far from economic centres such as Lagos. The capital Abuja was 
however bombed in 2011 and 2012.
It has not affected southern oil fields that provide the bulk of government 
revenues in Africa's second biggest economy.
Residents and Reuters reporters saw army trucks carrying soldiers 
enter Yola and Maiduguri to seek out militants from Boko Haram, whose 
rebellion has targeted the security forces, Christians and politicians 
in the mainly Muslim north.
The troop deployment is likely to placate some of Jonathan's critics, who had 
accused him of not facing up to the gravity of the crisis, 
although some northern politicians have already voiced concerns over 
rising tensions.
It is unlikely those tensions will boil over to the other parts of 
the country. The Islamists have a foothold across most of the north, but 
nothing like the power base they have established in these three 
states.
In December 2011, Jonathan declared a state of emergency over some 
local government areas, after a church bombing blamed on Boko Haram 
killed 37 people, but he lifted it in July 2012.
Ayo Oritsejafor, head of the powerful Christian Association of 
Nigeria, said the move showed Jonathan's plan to offer the rebels an 
amnesty had been misguided, saying "no reasonable agreement can be 
reached with terrorists."
BOLDER INSURGENCY
It is unclear whether greater military might can win a battle against an 
adversary that has proved a master at melting away under pressure, 
only to re-emerge again elsewhere.
"The government is thinking it can crush them like Sra Lanka crushed 
the Tamil rebels," Kole Shettima, chairman of the Centre for Democracy 
and Development, told Reuters.
"But in Sra Lanka they pushed them to the water, whereas here they will just 
flee into the desert and come back."
A Reuters reporter saw six trucks carrying soldiers enter Yola, the 
capital of Adamawa state. In the Borno state capital Maiduguri, the 
biggest city in the area and birthplace of the insurgency, residents 
also reported an influx of troops.
The mood was tense in that city. Shops were mostly shut and there were few 
people on the streets. Schools were closed.
Maiduguri residents are used to living under military restrictions -- a curfew 
kills activity at 6 p.m. every day -- and soldiers patrolling 
the streets are a common sight. But residents said they saw soldiers in 
much greater numbers.
"I have never seen soldiers on the move quite like this before." said one man 
in Maiduguri, Ahmed Mari.
Jonathan's orders followed growing evidence that a better equipped, 
better armed Boko Haram now controls territory around Lake Chad, where 
local officials have fled.
"What we are facing is ... a rebellion and insurgency by terrorist 
groups which pose a very serious threat to ... territorial integrity," 
Jonathan said in the address. "Already, some northern parts of Borno 
state have been taken over."
Officials say militants control at least 10 local government 
districts of Borno state -- an arid region that once hosted one of West 
Africa's oldest medieval Islamic empires -- and are using porous borders with 
Cameroon, Chad and Niger to smuggle in arms and mount increasingly bold attacks.
Security sources say their strategy appears to be similar to that of 
the al-Qaeda-linked militants who overran Mali late last year, before 
the French kicked them out in January: take over remote desert areas and 
establish a de facto rule there, then use that as a base from which to 
expand.
They have forged growing links with jihadists across the Sahara 
region, intelligence sources say. But they also enjoy a degree of 
popular support among a poor, ill-educated populace.
"This state of emergency will not change anything if the people do 
not cooperate and start exposing members of Boko Haram," said David 
John, a director in the state government.
Dozens of Boko Haram fighters laid siege to the Borno town of Bama 
last week, freeing more than 100 men from prison and leaving 55 people 
dead, mostly police.
Rights groups say abuses by Nigerian troops in the northeast -- such 
as a raid in the remote town of Baga that killed dozens last month -- 
have alienated the population against them.
A crackdown on Boko Haram in 2009 led to the deaths of 800 people, 
including its founder Mohammed Yusuf, who died in police custody. 
Instead of crushing them, it unleashed a torrent of popular rage that 
only made the Islamists more deadly.
(Additional reporting by Lanre Ola in Maiduguri; Writing and 
additional reporting by Tim Cocks in Lagos; Editing by Alastair 
Macdonald and Giles Elgood)
© Thomson Reuters 2011. All rights reserved. Users may download and 
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