Ukraine in Arabic | 5 thousands people killed by jihadists last month
KYIV/Ukraine in Arabic/ Jihadist attacks killed more than 5,000 people in just one month, an investigation by the BBC World Service and King's College London has found. The investigation - coordinated with the International Centre for the Study of Radicalization (ICSR) - recorded a total of 664 attacks in 14 countries.
It aims to quantify the human cost of jihadist violence in one
The investigation showed that nearly seven people died every hour in November as a result of violence attributed to al-Qaeda, its offshoots and groups that subscribe to a similar ideology.
The study recorded a daily average of 22 such attacks and 168 fatalities. Islamic State (IS) militants - operating in Iraq and Syria - were responsible for more than 2,000 deaths.
Of the 5,042 people killed in total, a majority - 2,079 - were civilians. Military personnel made up 1,723 deaths. Nearly 1,000 jihadists were reported killed during attacks.
Iraq was the single deadliest country, accounting for a third of all deaths and the highest number of attacks.
Nigeria was the second deadliest country, with Boko Haram blamed for the killings there.
Taliban violence made Afghanistan the third-deadliest country. In one
The report was conducted by the BBC World Service and ICSR, a non-profit non-governmental think tank based at King's College, London.
"The data makes it clear that jihadists and al-Qaeda are no longer one and the same," Peter Neumann, the director of ICSR, writes in an analysis for the BBC.
"Sixty per cent of jihadist deaths were caused by groups that have no formal association with al-Qaeda, and they are the ones who will vie for leadership of the movement," he says.
"The overall picture is that of an increasingly ambitious, complex, sophisticated and far-reaching movement."
The single deadliest attack in November was a bomb attack on the Grand Mosque in the Nigerian city of Kano that killed 120 people.
Bombings accounted for the most deaths overall. Many people also died as a result of gun attacks, shelling and beheadings.