The violent sect, Boko Haram and other 
groups in northern Nigeria received $3m from Osama bin Laden in 2002, 
according to a report by some United States intelligence analysts.
Bin Laden was said to have dispatched an
 aide to Nigeria to hand out the seed money in naira to a wide array of 
Salafist political organisations that shared al Qaeda’s goal of imposing
 Islamic rule.
According to  a report in a United States-based newspaper, The Daily Beast, the Al-Qaeda founder helped provide Boko Haram’s seed money.
Boko Haram was founded by Mohammed Yusuf in 2002. Yusuf was killed in police custody in 2009.
The Daily Beast reported on 
Sunday  that officially, the U.S. intelligence community believed that 
the sect had only tangential links to al Qaeda’s North African 
affiliate, and that reports of bin Laden backing the Nigerian outfit 
were off-base, but many analysts have believed that the ties between 
Boko Haram and al Qaeda global leadership go much deeper—and are about 
more than a little seed money.
“There were channels between bin laden and Boko Haram leadership,” one senior U.S. intelligence offical told The Daily Beast, adding that “He gave some strategic direction at times.”
A comprehensive report on Boko Haram 
published by the International Crisis Group, also confirmed that  Boko 
Haram’s early leader, Mohammed Yusuf, received some seed money from a 
disciple of Osama bin Laden named Mohammed Ali in 2002.
The report added that bin Laden got to 
know Ali in the 1990s when he was based in Sudan, adding that after Ali 
travelled with bin Laden to Afghanistan, he was provided with $3m in 
Nigerian currency in 2002 and sent to the north of the country to fund a
 wide array of Salafist political organisations to help spread 
al-Qaeda’s ideology.
Ali then became involved in the Nigeria’s Muslim insurgency but was eventually killed.

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