Nigeria has warned civilians that Boko Haram is using deadly cluster
bombs but campaigners say the Islamists may have got the banned weapons
from the military in the first place.
Defence spokesperson Rabe
Abubakar urged people to be on their guard for "cluster bombs, sometimes
scalled scatter bombs", as engineers had recently found caches in
north-eastern Adamawa state.
"The military high command has
discovered that the Boko Haram terrorists in the areas have used such
lethal instruments over time to push their callous terrorist cause," he
said last Thursday.
"These bombs are used against large areas
containing many targets such as columns of vehicles, marketplaces,
places of worship or large troop concentrations," he added in a
statement.
The
insurgents, allied to the Islamic State group in Syria and Iraq, have
in recent months increasingly used suicide and bomb attacks in northeast
Nigeria,
Chad, Cameroon and Niger.
Abuja has described the
attacks, which have caused mass civilian casualties, as desperate acts
following apparent army gains in the northeast when soldiers overran
their training camps, and hundreds of fighters allegedly surrendered.
Past use
Cluster
bombs are a category of ordnance dropped from planes or fired from
artillery via a shell, missile or rocket and spread hundreds of tiny
sub-munitions or "bomblets" over a wide area.
Many of the devices
fail to explode on impact and effectively become de facto landmines
hidden for years, making them difficult to clear and posing a
significant risk to civilians.
More than 100 countries signed the
UN Convention on Cluster Munitions that came into force on August 1 2010
banning the use, production, transfer and stockpiling of cluster
munitions.
Nigeria has signed but not ratified the convention and
the Cluster Munition Coalition (CMC) campaign group said Abuja had still
to declare its stockpiles and detail how it would get rid of them.
Photographs
posted on the Nigerian Defence Headquarters Twitter feed suggested the
bombs were sub-munitions for the French-made BLG-66 Belouga, normally
launched from aircraft, the CMC said.
Nigerian pilots are said to
have used the Belouga on bombing raids against rebel positions in Sierra
Leone in October 1997, while the junta in Freetown at the time said
civilians were also targeted.
Nigeria, which was then leading
troops from the West African regional force ECOMOG seeking to restore
the ousted Sierra Leone president Ahmad Tejan Kabbah, denied the claim.
CMC
director Megan Burke told AFP in an email exchange it was unclear how
Boko Haram was using the bombs, as the group does not operate aircraft.
But
she added: "As to where BH would have gotten them, it seems possible
that they could have come from Nigerian military stocks...
"Certainly
we will be monitoring developments on this as this is a weapon that
should not be used by anyone (government or non-state actor) under any
circumstances."
Nigeria has previously indicated it still has old stocks of British-made BL-755 cluster bombs, which are launched from aircraft.
Smuggling routes
Ordnance
expert Bob Seddon, a former head of bomb disposal for the British Army
in Iraq and Afghanistan, also mentioned reports the Nigerian Air Force
still has BL-755 munitions.
But he suggested the militants could
also have acquired cluster bombs from the former Libyan stockpile and
adapted them for use in IEDs, car and suicide bombs.
Smuggling
routes from north Africa through the Sahel have been pinpointed as a
likely source for Boko Haram weaponry, as well as looted armouries at
Nigerian bases in the northeast.
A propaganda video published on
social networks on Saturday showed Boko Haram fighters with a cache of
what appeared to be military issue rifles, sub-machine guns and
rocket-propelled grenades.
"We know that ISIL in Libya has been
making extensive use of munitions looted from [Gaddafi]-era ammunition
depots to make car bombs," Seddon wrote in an email.
"High explosive aircraft bombs are perfect for use in improvised IED main charges...
"It
is possible that BH may have got their hands on some aircraft Libyan
cluster munitions, the most common type being the Russian RBK-250.
"It is also possible that BH may have got their hands on some artillery or rocket delivered sub-munitions.
"The Chinese 122mm Type 84 rocket has been encountered in Libya and it delivers some very hazardous sub-munitions."
AFP
emailed and texted Colonel Abubakar to ask whether Boko Haram's cluster
bombs were home-made or commercially manufactured, where they may have
got them and when they had been used.
He was also asked whether Nigeria still had a stockpile of the munitions. But there was no immediate response.
Tuesday, October 13, 2015
Boko Haram cluster bombs may come from Nigerian military - campaigners
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