New Nigerian President, Muhammadu Buhari, salutes his supporters during his Inauguration in Abuja, Nigeria, Friday, May 29, 2015.

New Nigerian President, Muhammadu Buhari, salutes his supporters during his Inauguration in Abuja, Nigeria, Friday, May 29, 2015. Sunday Alamba/AP

Boko Haram and Nigeria's Army Are in a Human Rights Abuse Feedback Loop

Just as the White House wants to escalate its role in Nigeria's war with Boko Haram, Amnesty International says Abuja's army has a disturbing abundance of human rights abuses all its own.

A scathing report from Amnesty International claims to have unearthed a culture of human rights abuses by the Nigerian Army against Boko Haram suspects and civilians alike that will put newly sworn-in president Muhammadu Buhari under intense scrutiny. It will severely test his loyalty to the armed forces, where he spent most of his career, just as the Islamist militants resume their terror attacks.

Investigations and interviews with over four hundred victims and eyewitnesses since 2011 by the human rights organization have revealed the Nigerian army may have committed war crimes in its operations in northern Nigeria.

Amnesty reports that 7,000 young men and boys as young as nine, died in military detention through starvation, suffocation and  torture, and 1,200 more people were extrajudicially killed. Hundreds of detainees were packed in small cells, where diseases like Cholera were rife, with many dying from starvation and dehydration. In 2013, over 4,700 bodies were taken to a mortuary from a military detention center. A statement backed up by eyewitness evidence contained in the 133-page document.

The report comes at a time when recently inaugurated president Muhammadu Buhari is under enormous pressure from an electorate with high expectations to deliver on his promises to end the insurgency which has claimed over 20,000 lives in the northeast of Nigeria and displaced as many as a million people.

Buhari is a former military chief who is now commander in chief of the Nigerian army. The Amnesty allegations have intensified questions on whether Buhari will punish working commanders such as the chief of army staff and chief of defense who, according to the report, “were regularly informed of operations conducted in northeast Nigeria.” (The ministry of defence denied this allegation in a widely circulated press release titled “Amnesty International report intended to blackmail the Nigerian military.”

Buhari, in his inauguration speech last Friday, promised to take a strong stance against abuses in the army. In response to the report he “assured that his administration will study the document and act appropriately.”

Boko Haram is back

Since May 29, Boko Haram have carried out almost daily attacks in northeast Nigeria, mainly on the city of Maiduguri, Borno state, the birthplace of the Islamist group dashing any hopes that there would be an easing of tension with a new government in place. It’s particularly significant because Buhari tipped his hand in his inauguration speech saying he was moving the anti-insurgency command center to Maiduguri, from the capital city Abuja.

In the weeks leading up to Buhari taking the reins, the Council of Foreign Relations’  National Security Tracker , a data visualization mapping Boko Haram killings in Nigeria, recorded a decline in deaths mirroring the general hopes of Nigerians that the insurgents were slowing down. But that has changed.

More than 50 people have been killed in Maiduguri since last Friday, reports the Associated Press. It began with a suicide bombing that killed 26 people at a mosque, followed by an overnight rocket-propelled-grenade attack in a residential area. On Tuesday, there was a suicide bombing at a cattle abattoir; the following day, a blast at a military checkpoint.

“For four days now, we have experienced bomb attacks” said Koli, 28, a security man and resident of Maidugri who was reluctant to give his full name. “People are afraid to go to crowded areas such as markets and bus stops, but people are going about their business.”

Though the mood is tense in the city, people like Koli have no choice but to carry on with their normal routines. “In this town, if you don’t work you don’t eat,” he said.

And with a new bomb blast at a local night market on Thursday evening in Yola in the northeast Adamawa State, it now appears Boko Haram is building back up to full-scale regular attacks. The blast killed 33 people and injured another 21, according to the local Red Cross.

The bomb was believed to have gone off at 7:28 p.m. local time and appears to be a suicide attack.