惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

V
Vulnerabilities – Threatpost
T
The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss
S
SegmentFault 最新的问题
D
DataBreaches.Net
博客园_首页
罗磊的独立博客
B
Blog
T
Threat Research - Cisco Blogs
C
Cisco Blogs
GbyAI
GbyAI
Engineering at Meta
Engineering at Meta
WordPress大学
WordPress大学
G
GRAHAM CLULEY
H
Help Net Security
酷 壳 – CoolShell
酷 壳 – CoolShell
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
爱范儿
爱范儿
SecWiki News
SecWiki News
T
Threatpost
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
Schneier on Security
Schneier on Security
T
The Exploit Database - CXSecurity.com
Google Online Security Blog
Google Online Security Blog
T
Tor Project blog
小众软件
小众软件
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
Y
Y Combinator Blog
H
Hacker News: Front Page
V
V2EX
Security Latest
Security Latest
Cloudbric
Cloudbric
Simon Willison's Weblog
Simon Willison's Weblog
Attack and Defense Labs
Attack and Defense Labs
D
Darknet – Hacking Tools, Hacker News & Cyber Security
P
Proofpoint News Feed
博客园 - 三生石上(FineUI控件)
NISL@THU
NISL@THU
S
Secure Thoughts
Blog — PlanetScale
Blog — PlanetScale
博客园 - 司徒正美
V2EX - 技术
V2EX - 技术
Vercel News
Vercel News
P
Palo Alto Networks Blog
IT之家
IT之家
MyScale Blog
MyScale Blog
有赞技术团队
有赞技术团队
Application and Cybersecurity Blog
Application and Cybersecurity Blog
D
Docker
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
Webroot Blog
Webroot Blog

www.telegraph.co.uk for the latest news from the UK and around the world.

Marlborough racing tips and best bets for today's races World Cup 2026: Everything you need to know Telegraph Fantasy Football tips: Game Week 38 Microwave pea and ham risotto County Championship 2026, Division 1: live scoreboards County Championship 2026, Division 2, week 1: live scoreboards Live event | The Daily T podcast: On the Road I wanted to switch my broadband provider. I had no idea what I was signing myself up for Rory McIlroy surges six clear and sets Masters record after stunning display The best nightlife in Bilbao | Telegraph Travel The best things to do in Bilbao | Telegraph Travel Bath break Northampton hearts on one of European club rugby’s great nights Unknown disease kills five in Burundi Seabass with spring vegetables and vermouth en papillote Salt-baked Jersey Royals with asparagus, leeks, radishes and sauce gribiche The best plays and musicals in London (and beyond) to book in 2026 Trump’s war in Iran sends US petrol prices soaring - latest updates Crunchy carrot and cabbage salad with a peanut dressing Chinese-style chicken and egg fried rice Leeks, goat’s cheese and spelt salad with lemon and elderflower Amazon is ending support for pre-2013 Kindles: What to do if you’re affected Rory McIlroy in share of Masters lead after picking up where he left off Five essential things to know before you board a Disney Cruise Line ship | Telegraph Travel Ollie Watkins on verge of Villa greatness after sending Thomas Tuchel World Cup reminder Trafficked animals more likely to share pathogens with humans, says study From lockdown to Los Angeles: the rise and rise of South Sudan's blind footballers World economy faces growth shock, IMF warns Droughts driving spread of drug-resistant infections, research shows Liverpool refuse to wave white flag against, but don’t bet on another famous comeback Chipotle-griddled chicken with avocado, chorizo, quinoa and lime creme fraiche Gas tumbles as Qatar prepares to restart production Jersey Royal potato salad Is an electric BBQ better than charcoal and gas? I tested them to find out and these are the best Arsenal’s super subs to the rescue again in victory over Sporting Harry Kane and Trent Alexander-Arnold put on a show for Thomas Tuchel as Bayern beat Real Measles death toll surges in Bangladesh as outbreak overwhelms hospitals The top foods to cook in an air fryer Borrowing costs jump as Trump threatens to end Iran’s ‘whole civilisation’ The 11 best pregnancy pillows for comfort and support, tested by expecting mothers Leeds and West Ham deliver ludicrous Cup tie free from Premier League constraints Bordeaux tear apart Leicester to set up clash of titans with Toulouse I was a fashion editor, now I’m a builder-in-training. These are the cordless drills worth buying Wilder beats Chisora via split decision after gruelling contest Boat Race 2026 result: Cambridge men defeat Oxford to extend era of dominance Arsenal must wake up or there will be nothing to celebrate this season Rosenior refuses to respond to Fernandez agent’s comments as Chelsea hit seven Toulouse play rugby from the gods to demolish Bristol Bath deny Mark McCall a fairy-tale finish as Saracens approach end of an era Man City 4 Liverpool 0: Arne Slot will struggle to win back fans calling for Xabi Alonso Is this the world's toughest reconstruction project? Bunny Guinness: My favourite gardening tools Iran’s Pasteur medical research centre ‘heavily damaged’ in strike Mortgage rates hit three-year high as Trump vows more strikes – latest updates The best portable air conditioners to consider during hot weather I slept on 12 air beds to find the ones that are actually comfortable – these are the best ‘Amazing tasting, evenly cooked results in minutes’: The best pizza ovens, tested by our experts Alistair Brownlee answers reader questions: ‘I’ve been in a swimming pool zero times since retiring’ The best children’s theatre shows in London (and beyond) to book now Chelsea v Arsenal: Bompastor fury at unpunished hair pull in frantic end to Champions League tie Marc Skinner calls on Manchester United to invest after ‘punch in the face’ An expert guide to a weekend in Las Vegas | Telegraph Travel Reeves backs North Sea drilling Water wars: the final escalation? The 10 best yoga poses for beginners Don’t know where to start with Lego? As a collector, these are the sets I recommend Our experts have spent months testing smartphones to bring you the best for your lifestyle Explosive measles outbreak kills 46 children in Bangladesh Persian rice with dill and broad beans England are dreaming if they think they can win the World Cup Could underwater living help save the world's oceans? How to wrap gifts like a pro Rhubarb, apple and raspberry pudding with sour cream and marmalade sponge Fish with turmeric, dill and coconut Pork chops with spring onion salad and Korean dipping sauce Roast cauliflower, Lancashire cheese and nutmeg tart Very lemony lemon cake Grilled asparagus, sorrel pesto and burrata World recession warning as Trump ‘loses control’ of Iran war Why tens of millions face hunger and poverty in wake of Trump’s Iran war Man City end Arsenal’s quadruple hopes with League Cup final humbling Starmer: Government can’t handle Iran war fallout ‘on its own’ I have tinnitus. These white noise machines and apps help me sleep (with options for babies, too) The best prams, pushchairs and buggies, tested by new parents (and their babies) These are best tumble dryers for your home, according to experts Kepu Tuipulotu inspires comeback as Bath’s heavyweight bench sees off Sale Northampton Saints and Henry Pollock land late knockout blow on Saracens Teenage phenom Antonelli stuns Russell with victory in Japanese Grand Prix Itauma proves credentials for world title shot with brutal knockout of Franklin Steve Clarke Clarke disappointed by boos as Japan stun Scotland at Hampden Mark Lane answers Telegraph Recommended reader questions Stir-fried prawns with sugar-snap peas, Thai basil, chilli and lime Max Verstappen ‘beyond frustrated’ at new era of F1 Ben White booed by England fans as second-string squad fails to impress Tuchel Herbed tomato and onion galette Artichoke, broad bean and shallot salad with saffron dressing Barbecue vegetables with romesco sauce Chargrilled spring onions with hazelnuts and lime and honey dressing Pistachio and lemon cake with ricotta and candied peel Everything you need to know about Isas – individual savings accounts explained Nine-man Crystal Palace hold off Brighton in chaotic victory
Terrorist turf war over Lake Chad plunges thousands into hunger
Arthur Scott-Geddes · 2026-05-25 · via www.telegraph.co.uk for the latest news from the UK and around the world.

Inside a mud-brick hut on the edge of a camp for people displaced by terrorism, an ex-Boko Haram fighter is explaining what drew him to the group.

“I joined because I had no choice,” said the former militant, Bahana Alhadji. Then aged 22 and struggling to make a living fishing on Lake Chad, he told The Telegraph that joining the group gave him status, camaraderie and a reliable source of food. “When I was there, we were given rations every week. They made me feel welcome.”

As a kind of perverse signing bonus, Alhadji was given three teenage ‘wives’. The group is notorious for systematically enslaving young women and girls and forcing them into marriages with its fighters.

Bana (right), a former Boko Haram combatant who left the group and now lives in the Fourkolum displacement site with his wives and children
Bana Aljadji (right), a former Boko Haram combatant who left the group and now lives in the Fourkolum displacement site with his wives and children Credit: Hugh Kinsella Cunningham/The Telegraph

It is easy to see how groups like Boko Haram appeal to young men like Alhadji. Life in the Lake Chad basin is precarious, the government provides no basic services, and opportunities for improving your position are scarce.

Over five years Alhadji rose to become a senior commander, taking part in what he euphemistically called “military operations” (really raids targeting defenceless villages), and battling the local ISIS-aligned offshoot as well as the Chadian and Nigerian militaries.

“I have killed many people,” he said blithely, a broad grin spreading over his face as he recounted his exploits.

“The toughest fighting was with ISWAP,” he said, referring to the Islamic State’s West Africa Province, which was formed by a faction that broke away from Boko Haram in 2015.

It is now its chief ideological rival but it is outmatched in terms of sheer brutality, Alhadji said. ISWAP, he explained, largely spares civilians. Boko Haram shows no such mercy.

The conflict between these groups, which are both vying to establish Islamic states in this lawless corner of Central Africa, has exploded in recent months, with each seeking to dominate the region’s lucrative trade.

The groups are behaving less like jihadists and more like warring mafias, unleashing a wave of kidnappings and extortion as they attempt to fill their coffers.

This turf war has plunged an already inhospitable region into humanitarian catastrophe, collapsing the regional economy and fuelling a worsening hunger crisis, with women and children being hit hardest.

Propaganda videos produced by both sides show all out warfare over the islands of Lake Chad.

Though it has shrunk dramatically in recent decades, the lake still measures hundreds of square miles and straddles the borders of four countries.

One recent clip from a Boko Haram raid on an island held by ISWAP makes the footage coming out of Ukraine or the Middle East look tame by comparison. In it, a boatload of heavily armed fighters chase down an enemy vessel, guns blazing. Less than two frenzied minutes later, all that’s left of their target is a cloud of blood hanging in the water.

A dry lake bed in the vicinity of the Fourkolum displacement site
A dry lake bed in the vicinity of the Fourkolum displacement site Credit: Hugh Kinsella Cunningham

In the villages and displacement sites that dot the arid landscape around the lake it is not hard to find people who have been on the receiving end of this violence.

Mariam Abakar Koukouy is one of them. Ten days before we met she fled a Boko Haram attack on her village, and she is now trying to build a new life for herself, her husband and seven children on the outskirts of Kafia, just north of the lake. Almost everyone here has been affected in some way by the terrorists.

“We were taken by surprise,” she said of the night raid, still clearly shaken by her experience. “Forty attackers stormed the village armed with guns. I heard the sound of their weapons, grabbed my children and hid in the bathroom.”

It was clear what the attackers were after.

Mariam Abakar Koukouy with her daughter Yaka who was injured in a Boko Haram suicide bombing
Mariam Abakar Koukouy with her daughter Yaka who was injured in a Boko Haram suicide bombing Credit: Hugh Kinsella Cunningham/The Telegraph

“They were kidnapping people and taking their belongings, women and children,” she said.

“They ransacked our home, taking our things as well as my farming equipment. They tied up others so they could loot their houses.”

When one of her neighbours managed to wriggle free of their bindings and escape, confusion broke out among the fighters, she said.

“Everyone took advantage of that moment to flee the village. I did not bring any possessions with me – my husband fled without any clothes.”

Two of Mariam’s neighbours were among those kidnapped, but later escaped. She and her family now live in a hut built by an aid agency but they rely on begging to eat.

“It’s very hard to beg to feed the family. I don’t know where to turn – I feel like a chicken that’s had its head cut off.”

Even in Kafia Boko Haram is an ever-present threat, and Mariam lives in constant fear of another attack.

“I’m scared, I can’t sleep,” she said (the jihadists mostly come out at night). “I’m worried about my children’s safety [...] I can’t even go out to collect firewood.”

She has good reason to be fearful, and doubts the family will ever return home.

Ngbouboua has been the target of numerous attacks dating as far back as 2015, when Boko Haram spilled across the Nigerian border into Chad for the first time.

Mariam’s own eldest daughter, Yaka, 17, was wounded when Boko Haram suicide bombers struck the local market in 2017. Only a child at the time, she suffered a fractured leg and her foot was damaged so badly that it eventually had to be amputated to stop an infection. Her bandaged stump made fleeing her village even more difficult.

And in 2022, as many as 40 soldiers were killed when waves of Boko Haram fighters attacked a Chadian military outpost there – one of the worst losses of life suffered by the army in the conflict.

Boko Haram’s insurgency has claimed an estimated 350,000 lives and forced millions to flee their homes since it first erupted in northern Nigeria in 2009.

As of February 2026, some 3.3 million people remained displaced internally in Nigeria, Chad, Cameroon and Niger, according to the UN’s migration agency.

Kidnappings for ransom are a key part of the terrorists’ operation, and staggering numbers of people have been abducted, particularly in Nigeria, where it has become an epidemic.

In just this part of Chad, there have been 319 kidnappings recorded since January, 63 of them in April, according to the International NGO Safety Organisation.

Men, women, children, aid workers and foreigners are all targets of terrorists
Men, women, children, aid workers and foreigners are all targets of terrorists Credit: Hugh Kinsella Cunningham

A typical ransom payment ranges between 100,000 and 500,000 Central African Francs (about £130 to £660) – a huge amount in a country where around 87 per cent of the rural population lives on less than a dollar a day.

The terrorists do not discriminate. Christians, Muslims, men, women, children, aid workers or foreigners, all are considered valid targets.

To get their loved ones back families might have to sell their land, livestock or other assets, leaving them more vulnerable. Sometimes whole villages or ethnic groups will band together to cough up, but no one ever admits to paying for fear of being accused of helping the terrorists.

Most people kidnapped by Boko Haram never return. If the ransom is not paid, the victims are simply executed. Some have gone to extraordinary lengths to avoid this fate.

Livestock traders attend a market day in the town of Baga Sola
Livestock traders attend a market day in the town of Baga Sola Credit: Hugh Kinsella Cunningham/The Telegraph

A few huts away in Kafia, Saleh Yusuf Issa, a 40-year-old fisherman, sat on a woven mat in the shade of a tree – temperatures at this time of year regularly hit the mid 40s and the heat is hard to escape.

Saleh has lived here for 12 years since fleeing when Boko Haram attacked his village on the lake.

But a week earlier he had been abducted when Boko Haram fighters stormed the village of Toumun, where he was staying overnight after a day fishing.

Saleh Yusuf Issa, pictured with his family, escaped from his kidnappers and is now too scared to leave home
Saleh Yusuf Issa, pictured with his family, escaped from his kidnappers and is now too scared to leave home Credit: Hugh Kinsella Cunningham/The Telegraph

“There were 21 people – they were armed up to their teeth. They had guns, they had bombs,” he said.

Saleh and his fellow captives were chained together and forced to march in the direction of the Nigerian border, travelling at times by boat.

Over two days, they were beaten and tortured viciously, exposed to the punishing sun, and eaten alive by mosquitoes.

Saleh quickly lost hope of ever seeing his family again – they would never be able to afford the ransom.

A chameleon climbs a tree in Kasia
A chameleon climbs a tree in Kasia Credit: Hugh Kinsella Cunningham/The Telegraph

“I thought I was going to die. We had all heard the stories that they slit people’s throats. So I just thought ‘that’s it, I’ve left my family behind’.”

Then, on the second night, Saleh noticed that the shackles binding him and another captive to the rest of their group had become loose.

Choosing their moment carefully, the two broke free, ran into the dark and did not look back. Saleh said he did not stop running until he was back in Kafia, lifting his feet to show the deep cuts and gashes that are evidence of his ordeal. He is still traumatised by the experience.

“Whenever I close my eyes I am taken back. I can see the scenes in front of me, the way we were tortured,” he said.

A commotion nearby seemed to break his train of thought – a bright green chameleon was jerkily making its way along a tree branch, causing a stir among the children who had gathered to listen to his story.

Saleh no longer feels safe fishing in Toumoun, and refuses to leave the village to work for fear of being kidnapped again.

This fear was common among the people The Telegraph spoke to.

In Kafia alone, seven people have been kidnapped by Boko Haram in the last three weeks.

One had their throat cut on camera, with the video sent to the villagers as a warning: pay up or suffer the same end.

One managed to escape, while another returned after a ransom was paid. The other four are still missing.

Children set off in canoes to fish in Lake Chad near the town of Baga Sola
Children set off in canoes to fish in Lake Chad near the town of Baga Sola Credit: Hugh Kinsella Cunningham

It is difficult to overstate how heavily the explosion of terrorist activity has hurt the local economy.

Nine in 10 people in the Lake Chad basin depend on fishing, livestock and farming for their survival, according to a 2022 report from the Institute for Security Studies (ISS).

Moussa Ali repairs a canoe on the shores of Lake Chad
Moussa Ali repairs a canoe on the shores of Lake Chad Credit: Hugh Kinsella Cunningham/The Telegraph

There should really be enough food to go around. The lake supports about 120 species of fish and is surrounded by tracts of rich, fertile soil. Reeds grow in abundance and are used as a versatile building material.

But what was once a hub of agricultural activity and trade has deteriorated into deep poverty, and over 10 million people are now heavily dependent on humanitarian aid, according to Doctors Without Borders (MSF).

Meanwhile the terrorist groups are making a fortune.

ISWAP alone raises an estimated £31 million every year by extorting fishing communities on the lake, bringing in an extra £1.6 million annually in levies on smoked fish shipped from the lake, according to the ISS report. The terror group even has its own fleet of fishing boats which it rents out.

On the banks of a smaller lake near Baga Sola, one of the province’s biggest towns, a group of fishermen are preparing to go out on the water.

Many people in the Lake Chad basin depend on fishing
Many people in the Lake Chad basin depend on fishing Credit: Hugh Kinsella Cunningham/The Telegraph

One was busy repairing their boat – a rudimentary craft with a wood-framed hull and a skin made from old plastic barrels. Another was stringing a line with dozens of tiny hooks.

The youngest of the group was 20-year-old Ali Hassan. He was kidnapped along with several others while fishing on the lake and only escaped two weeks ago.

He remembers his ankles being shackled, and said he was taken “very far away, towards Nigeria”. He endured in captivity for 21 days before escaping.

Though he is free, he lamented that fishing in his usual spots had become much too dangerous.

“Here we are safe but I worry that one day the armed groups will take over this area as well,” he said.

The conversation was interrupted by the arrival of more fishermen – two teenage boys – whose boat was dragged to the launch by a camel that seemed to appear out of nowhere.

Without wasting any time they boarded their craft and vanished through a gap in the reeds.

Camels drag boats to the shores of Lake Chad near the town of Baga Sola
Camels drag boats to the shores of Lake Chad near the town of Baga Sola Credit: Hugh Kinsella Cunningham/The Telegraph

The disruption to so many people’s livelihoods has caused a severe hunger crisis.

All together, there are now 7.4 million people facing acute food insecurity (level three out of five on the UN-backed IPC hunger monitor’s scale) or worse, in the Lake Chad basin.

In technical terms that means that millions are having to go without food on a regular basis, but in practice that means clinics are filling up with children and mothers whose bodies are shutting down because they haven’t had enough to eat.

In the malnutrition ward at Baga Sola District Hospital, which is run with support from the International Rescue Committee (IRC), sixteen beds were arranged in order of severity with the worst cases at the end of the room, closest to the nurse’s station. All but one of them were occupied.

The Baga Sola district hospital
The Baga Sola district hospital Credit: Hugh Kinsella Cunningham

To be admitted here a child has to be suffering from severe acute malnutrition, which is determined by measuring the circumference of the upper arm. Anything less than 10cm – slightly bigger than a £2 coin – meets this classification. It is a horrific and dangerous state for a child to be in.

In one of the beds closest to the nurse’s station sat Zara Ousman, who brought her two-year-old daughter Abouma into the clinic after she started vomiting.

“I was scared, she was losing so much weight and she stopped eating,” she said. “When we arrived a day ago she was so weak I was worried she would die.”

Zara Ousman, whose child Abouma is being treated for malnutrition in Baga Sola district hospital
Zara Ousman, whose child Abouma is being treated for malnutrition in Baga Sola district hospital Credit: Hugh Kinsella Cunningham/The Telegraph

The family has been short of food for a while.

“Sometimes we eat once a day, but most of the time we don’t have any food,” she said.

While Abouma had made good progress since arriving at the clinic, being given therapeutic milk through a feeding tube, her mother was worried about what would happen after they left.

Acheida Adam with her two-year-old son Hanoune Ali, who is being treated for malnutrition at Baga Sola district hospital
Acheida Adam with her two-year-old son Hanoune Ali, who is being treated for malnutrition Credit: Hugh Kinsella Cunningham/The Telegraph

“My main concern is that when I go back, my husband still won't have any work and we won't have enough food – not just for me and the baby but the rest of the family.”

Her concern was shared by doctors at the clinic.

Dr Djimasra Altonan, who helps oversee the hospital, explained that if a child suffers multiple episodes of acute malnourishment, it can turn into chronic malnutrition, better known as stunting.

“This will have longer term effects, impacting their brain development and also their physical development,” he said.

“A child who's been malnourished and therefore doesn't fully develop – it's a burden on the parents and a burden on society because they can't contribute.”

Stunting can also interfere with the development of the pelvis, with serious consequences for maternal health, he added.

“A lot of women can't deliver naturally because their pelvis is too small, and they have to be brought in and need surgical help.”

Most of Dr Altonan’s patients are displaced people or refugees who have fled the conflict.

“They would have lived on the islands where they’re able to fish or they farm but had to flee because of the insecurity. They come here and live in the IDP sites and they don’t have the same opportunities to access food or make money.”

Herders and their livestock leave the town of Baga Sola at dusk after market day
Herders and their livestock leave the town of Baga Sola at dusk after market day Credit: Hugh Kinsella Cunningham

The hunger crisis, he said, had been exacerbated by deep cuts to humanitarian aid in recent months.

The World Food Programme once provided additional supplementary feeding programmes, but “that doesn’t exist anymore,” he said.

There are now many the clinic cannot help, and the situation is continuing to deteriorate.

Mouktar Dorsouma, a Senior Project Manager for the IRC based in Baga Sola, said: “With the cutbacks, everything has been put on hold.”

Groups of Fulani nomadic herders with their livestock in a valley in the Lake Chad area
Groups of Fulani nomadic herders with their livestock in a valley in the Lake Chad area Credit: Hugh Kinsella Cunningham/The Telegraph

In less than six months the lake region has already registered the same number of malnourished people that had been expected over the course of a year, he said.

“Children are simply falling into malnutrition, because there is no food.”

In the village of Tagal, a short drive along an unmarked sand trail from Baga Sola, a young mother has had to watch her daughter succumbing to malnourishment.

A family walk with their pack donkeys by the shores of Lake Chad
A family walk with their pack donkeys by the shores of Lake Chad Credit: Hugh Kinsella Cunningham/The Telegraph

“For the past year I have noticed my child showing signs of illness caused by a lack of food, due to the fact that it is impossible to go fishing on the islands,” said Youngou Mahamat, 32. Her two-year-old, Baba, lay motionless in her lap, oblivious to the flies circling around them.

The family’s diet, she said, now consisted almost entirely of maize.

“In the morning we eat maize flour porridge, in the afternoon we eat maize balls, and the same for dinner.”

The IRC has given the family medicines and nutritional supplements, but it has only slowed the child’s decline.

The family is among the internally-displaced, and has been here for 10 years since Boko Haram sacked their village, Blarigui, in a night raid.

Transport in the town of Baga Sola
Transport in the town of Baga Sola Credit: Hugh Kinsella Cunningham/The Telegraph

Youngou’s husband, Hassoun Ibrahim, remembers the attack all too well.

“We saw people dressed in black entering the village from the north and south. Those on the north side were burning houses whilst those on the south side were firing their weapons. We grabbed our children in a hurry and fled with them.”

Hassoun and his family were able to escape, but his younger brother, who lived on the edge of the village, was not so lucky.

“They captured him and they cut his throat right there,” he said, his eyes widening. “I really don’t understand why they are so brutal, why they come to decapitate people. I really don’t understand.”

In the end it seems as though it was a lack of opportunities for career development that prompted Alhadji to leave Boko Haram.

Hassoun Ibrahim with his wife and child
Hassoun Ibrahim with his wife and child Credit: Hugh Kinsella Cunningham/The Telegraph

After five years he had ended up in charge of a unit responsible for resolving internal disputes within the group, of which there must have been many – a kind of terrorist HR manager.

While grateful for his rations, he said he received no pay “even though I was part of the army”.

So in 2023 he decided to flee, making a daring escape across the lake to join the community of displaced people in the village of Fourkoulom.

The former fighter said he had been welcomed “with open arms” and even brought two of his wives with him. But one stayed behind and remarried, and he joked that he suddenly had “a vacancy” that he had no trouble filling.

Alhadji claimed he “deeply regretted” becoming part of Boko Haram.

“The advice I give to anyone wanting to join this group is that they should never even think of going there,” he said.

His repentance was hard to believe.

Alhadji fled Boko Haram in 2023
Alhadji fled Boko Haram in 2023 Credit: Hugh Kinsella Cunningham/The Telegraph

Meanwhile, Alhadji’s former comrades have stepped up their attacks since he left.

Around 40 soldiers were killed in an October 2024 attack, prompting Mahamat Déby, the Chadian president, to launch a major counteroffensive which he promised to lead himself (his predecessor, Idriss Déby, holds the dubious distinction of being the most recent head of state to die in combat, succumbing to wounds he picked up fighting rebels in 2021).

More recently, Chad declared three days of mourning after two of its generals were killed in a Boko Haram ambush earlier this month.

Two days before that, at least 24 soldiers were killed and dozens more were injured in a raid on a military base on the island of Barka Tolorom, leading to retaliatory air strikes that are believed to have mistakenly killed dozens of Nigerian fishermen.

Analysts have long argued that years of counterinsurgency operations have so far failed to put a stop to the violence because of a lack of focus on addressing the root causes of the conflict, from systemic poverty and historical marginalisation to corruption and weak governance.

The vast swathes of border territory in which Boko Haram and ISWAP operate also make stamping them out all but impossible – the terrorists can melt away into the marshes, deserts and forests as quickly as they appear.

Chadian troops on the road between the city of N’djamena and Lac Province
Chadian troops on the road between the city of N’djamena and Lac Province Credit: Hugh Kinsella Cunningham/The Telegraph

The Telegraph understands that French military advisers have recently returned to Chad for the first time since its troops were unceremoniously kicked out of the country in 2024, as the country joined others in the region and pivoted towards Russia.

The United States has also stepped up its military action against ISWAP in recent weeks, carrying out drone strikes in the lake basin targeting the group and reportedly killing its deputy leader, Abu-Bilal al-Minuki, and several of his lieutenants.

In a Facebook post published as the country reeled from the Barka Tolorom attack, President Déby vowed: “We will continue the fight with renewed determination until this threat is completely eradicated.”

But any effort to defeat Boko Haram militarily is doomed to fail, Alhadji believes.

“The army cannot defeat Boko Haram [...] There are too many of them.” 

Protect yourself and your family by learning more about Global Health Security