The Boko Haram Thread

Schools close to avoid attacks

The governor of Nigeria's northeast Yobe state is ordering all schools closed to avoid attacks by Islamic militants who have killed dozens of students and teachers.

Gov. Ibrahim Gaidam issued the order Sunday after visiting students with burn and gunshot wounds from Saturday's attack on a boarding school outside Potiskum, the state's second largest town. Extremists set a dormitory ablaze, burning some students alive. At least 29 students and one teacher were killed.

Last month Islamic fighters attacked at least two schools, killing 16 students and two teachers.

Gaidam said such attacks could be averted if the military would resume cell phone service cut to three northeastern states since the government declared a state of emergency May 14. He said residents could have alerted the military by cell phone.


Source : Sapa-AP /pk
Date : 08 Jul 2013 09:06
 
Been happening since 2009 and you only do this now? These terrorists should have been wiped out immediately after they started killing. And they use Islam as their excuse? Please, I know my religion and it does not condone violence on such terms. You only fight when you need to protect yourself.

Read the other day that there are camps in SA. All they are going to do is to make peace loving muslim locals look bad (such as myself). Please get them out too, we have no interest in associating ourselves with them.

Boko Haraam means "no more haraam"

Its a tough one mate, I know that you are right and that Muslims/jews/atheists and Christians can all live in harmony in SA, but the question is how do we create an environment where it stays like that ?

I think the solution is that we need to realize, that because of the actions of fanatics in other countries (Israel, US, Iran, Nigeria etc) we all need to work a little harder to keep the peace here.
 
Nigeria Sentences 4 Islamists to life for deadly bombings

A Nigerian court on Tuesday sentenced four Islamist extremists to life in prison over 2011 attacks that killed at least 22 people, including the bombing of an electoral office before landmark polls.

The attacks on the electoral office, at a campaign rally and a church occurred in the central city of Suleija, near the capital Abuja. The suspects were accused of being members of Islamist extremist group Boko Haram.

The deadliest was at the electoral office, when 16 people died in a bombing on the eve of parliamentary polls, according to court documents. Three people were killed in the church attack and at least another three died at the campaign rally.

"Shuaibu Abubakar, Salisu Ahmed, Umar Babagana and Mohammed Ali were convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment on each count they were convicted of," the registrar at federal high court in Abuja told AFP.

They were accused of using explosives employed for blasting rocks in mining operations to kill or injure.

They were also accused of training others in the use of arms and detonation of explosives in Nasarawa state, also located near Abuja in central Nigeria.

A fifth man, Musa Adam, was acquitted on all counts, while a sixth, Umar Ibrahim, was sentenced to 10 years in prison for helping produce homemade bombs for the purpose of "terrorism".

A low-level opposition politician was initially charged in 2011 over the campaign rally bombing. It was not immediately clear what happened to his case or if the charges had been dropped.

Violence linked to Boko Haram's insurgency has left some 3,600 people dead since 2009, including killings by the security forces.

The group has targeted security forces and other Nigerian symbols of authority, church and schools, among others.

It has claimed to be seeking an Islamic state in Africa's most populous nation, roughly divided between a mainly Muslim north and predominantly Christian south.

The group however is believed to include various factions with differing aims. A sweeping military offensive launched in Nigeria's northeast in mid-May has been seeking to end Boko Haram's insurgency, but the violence has continued.


Source : Sapa-AFP /sdv
Date : 09 Jul 2013 18:11
 
Gunmen kill nine in Nigeria

Gunmen have killed at least nine people in attacks on three villages in Nigeria's MidEast region, the local Daily Times newspaper reported Wednesday.

The reason for the attacks on the villages in the district of Nzorov, in Benue state, remains unknown, according to police spokesman Daniel Ezeala. Scores of residents have fled to neighbouring villages.

It was the third such attack this month alone in the area of Guma, in which Nzorov is located.

Fulani herdsmen killed 34 people in Akuroko village in Guma on Monday, according to newspaper reports. Three days earlier, more than 20 people died during clashes between Fulani herdsmen and Tiv farmers in Iyordye Akaahena village, also located in Guma.


Source : Sapa-dpa /pk
Date : 10 Jul 2013 11:20
 
Mass Graves Found

Military officials say they have uncovered mass graves of decomposing bodies, networks of underground tunnels and caches of buried arms in raids that killed dozens of Islamic extremists in Nigeria's northeastern city of Maiduguri.

Sunday's statement about last week's raids contradicts previous military assurances that it had forced militants out of major cities and towns in a two-month-old security crackdown in three northeastern states covering one-sixth of Nigeria.

Spokesman Lt. Col. Sagir Musa said security forces also rescued many women and girls kidnapped by the extremists in an attack in Maiduguri's Bulabulinganaram neighborhood.

The extremists are alleged to be part of a group known as Boko Haram, which is believed responsible for hundreds of deaths and opposes education it deems as being "Western."


Source : Sapa-AP /mr
Date : 14 Jul 2013 21:41
 
The extremists are alleged to be part of a group known as Boko Haram, which is believed responsible for hundreds of deaths and opposes education it deems as being "Western."

/facepalm
 
Islam educating...

Pupils told to strip, then shot dead
July 15 2013

Mamudo, Nigeria - They crept up to the school under cover of darkness, armed with petrol and automatic weapons.

Most of the teachers and pupils had fled, but some students, one teacher and headmaster Adanu Haruna were still in the compound, one of many rural boarding schools in Nigeria surrounded by forest and farmland.

“They made the students line up and strip naked, then they made the ones with pubic hair lie face down on the ground,” Haruna said, eyes wide with horror at describing the attack on the iron-roofed school built by British colonisers in the 1950s.

“They shot them point blank then set the bodies on fire.”

The Mamudo government school, charred and smelling of scorched blood after 22 students and a teacher were killed there in the July 6 attack near Potiskum in Nigeria's north-east, was the fourth to be targeted by suspected Boko Haram militants in less than a month.

The attacks reveal much about the rebels who are fighting to revive a medieval Islamic caliphate in northern Nigeria, the type of state they are seeking to establish and the impact of their efforts to do so on the African economic powerhouse.

In a video uploaded to the Internet on Saturday, Boko Haram's purported leader Abubakar Shekau denied ordering the latest killings, saying Boko Haram does not itself kill small children, but he praised attacks on Western schools.

“We fully support the attack on school in Mamudo, as well as on other schools,” he said. “Western education schools are against Islam ... We will kill their teachers.”

Boko Haram, a nickname which translates roughly as “Western education is sinful”, formed around a decade ago as a clerical movement opposed to Western influence, which the sect's founder, Mohammed Yusuf, said was poisoning young minds against Islam.

Yet security forces and politicians were the main targets of the armed revolt it started after Yusuf's killing in a 2009 military crackdown that left 800 people dead.

Since those days Boko Haram has splintered into several factions, including some with ties to al Qaeda's Saharan wing, which analysts say operate more or less independently, despite Shekau's loose claim to authority over them.

Before June, there had been only a handful of attacks on the Western-style schools it so despises.

An offensive against the insurgents since President Goodluck Jonathan declared a state of emergency in three remote northern states in May, wresting control of the far northeast from Boko Haram and pushing its fighters into hiding, has changed that.

Across northeastern Nigeria, schools are emptying out, threatening further radicalisation and economic decline in a region left behind by the country's oil-rich Christian south.

Nassir Salaudeen, a teacher whose son was killed in a strike on Damaturu government school on June 16, the first of the wave of recent attacks, said he had put all his efforts into his boy's education in the hope he would get a good job.

“They killed him in cold blood, just because he was a student and his father a teacher,” a tearful Salaudeen said. “I regret ever being educated.”

For some, the school attacks are a sign the offensive has weakened the Islamist group, which is still seen as the main security threat to Africa's leading oil and gas producer.

“Given the security clampdown, many of the places like police stations or the military are getting harder for Boko Haram to hit,” said Kole Shettima, chairman of the Centre for Democracy and Development. “Schools are soft targets.”

But the attacks also reflect a radical ideology that resents modernity and yearns to wind back the clock to an era before West African lands were conquered by Europeans.

Centuries ago northern Nigeria, like much of West Africa, was ruled by Islamic empires feeding off trans-Saharan trade routes connecting Africa's forested interior with its Mediterranean coast.

Boko Haram rarely gives statements to the media. But the little it has said suggests it wants to restore those glory days.

Last year, the sect said it wanted to revive the 19th century caliphate of Usman Dan Fodio, an Islamic scholar who threw off corrupt Hausa kings and established strict Sharia law.

When Britain established Nigeria as a territory, it agreed to spare the largely Muslim north's leaders the activities of missionaries, who brought Christianity but also education and literacy that gave the south a head start over the north.

The north was able to retain its Islamic culture but at the cost of suffering economically; political and economic power has shifted to the south and the education gap has played a role in that growing discrepancy.

A lack of education and high youth unemployment has also helped Boko Haram's Islamist ideology to thrive.

“Boko Haram think the secular school system has brainwashed Nigerians to accept the post-colonial Western order and forget the Islamic ways that existed before,” said Jacob Zenn, an expert on the sect at the Washington-based Jamestown Foundation.

The attacks, which the UN children's fund (UNICEF) says have killed 48 students and seven teachers in the past month, aim to scare parents and their kids away from schools.

“It says: 'either take your children out of school or put them into an Islamist school we approve of',” Zenn said, one that teaches only in Arabic and omits courses like science.

He added that such schools need not necessarily be Boko Haram sponsored: there are conservative Islamic schools for children where they study under an Imam and the curriculum is all in Arabic and focused on the Koran. The sect accepts them.

Many people are turning away from education altogether.

“The risk isn't worth it. These guys are just mindless,” said Mike Ojo, a mechanic in the northeastern city of Maiduguri who is taking his three children out of school.

Even if they stayed, many teachers have left, said teacher Ali Umar from a Maiduguri secondary school, and in many schools there are often too few teachers for the pupils who stay put, leaving them with little choice but to leave.

“I am not prepared to die for teaching. Time to start looking for a new job,” he said, shrugging. “Most of our schools are deserted anyway.”

The spot where Halima Musa's husband was shot dead at their home on June 16 - in front of her and the children - is still caked with his dried blood, the wall pocked with bullet holes.

They came at 3am, guns blazing, demanding she open the door. She begged them to stop as they dragged the teacher out.

“They shot him three times in the head and told me that this should be a lesson not to marry a western educated person or any person that works for President Jonathan,” she said, choking back tears in front of three traumatised children.

Yobe state education commissioner Mohammed Lamin complained that the military had not done enough to protect schools from attack, even after they were targeted.

Before the murderous assault on the Maumdo school, there had been an earlier attack on May 8, in which some property was burnt. Headmaster Haruna said the security forces he called for help patrolled initially but stopped after a week.

http://www.iol.co.za/news/africa/pupils-told-to-strip-then-shot-dead-1.1547110#.UeWQZuUZm8o
 
I hope the nigerian military moves quickly & ruthlessly to remove this religious scum from the face of the planet, using what ever means or weapons able to fulfill the task.
Anything they don't like they deem western or unislamic.
They conveniently forget the killings and massacre's they are committing in the name of their "religion".
 
I hope the nigerian military moves quickly & ruthlessly to remove this religious scum from the face of the planet, using what ever means or weapons able to fulfill the task.
Anything they don't like they deem western or unislamic.
They conveniently forget the killings and massacre's they are committing in the name of their "religion".

+1
 
I hope the nigerian military moves quickly & ruthlessly to remove this religious scum from the face of the planet, using what ever means or weapons able to fulfill the task.
Anything they don't like they deem western or unislamic.
They conveniently forget the killings and massacre's they are committing in the name of their "religion".

+1
 
Two Dead in Nigeria Attack Blamed on Islamists

A girl and a policeman died in an attack in northern Nigeria Monday which the army blamed on the Islamist insurgent group Boko Haram.

The attack at the home of a Muslim cleric in Darazo, Bauchi state, was the first attributed to the extremist separatists since the start of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

"The gunmen came on motorcycles and headed straight to the home of the cleric and opened fire indiscriminately, killing a girl and a policeman living in the area," local resident Baffale Sanusi told AFP by telephone.

A military source confirmed the deaths and said two more people were wounded in the attack which took place at the time of Muslim evening prayers.

"We have received reports of shootings in Darazo this evening and we have mobilised troops from nearby military to the town to deal with the situation," a senior military source in Bauchi told AFP.

"We strongly suspect Boko Haram gunmen are behind the shootings," the source said.

Another local resident, Umar Mato, said the streets were deserted after the attack as soldiers "laid siege on the town looking for the gunmen".

Roughly translated, Boko Haram means "Western education is sin," and the insurgents have been blamed for previous raids on schools, with some analysts suggesting the group has selected shocking targets to generate attention.

Boko Haram has said it is fighting to create an Islamic state in Nigeria's mainly Muslim north.


Source : Sapa-AFP /dm
Date : 23 Jul 2013 02:17
http://www.naharnet.com/stories/en/91574-two-dead-in-nigeria-attack-blamed-on-islamists
 
Islamists kill 20 Civilians in Northern area of Nigeria: Military

Suspected members of Nigeria's Islamist group Boko Haram shot dead more than 20 civilians when a vigilante group attacked them in the northern Borno state, a military spokesman said Sunday.

"The suspected sect members came armed and fired sporadic shots that killed over twenty innocent civilians," Haruna Mohammed Sani, spokesman for the Multinational Joint Task Force (MNJTF) said.

The violence took place on Saturday in Dawashe village, the army lieutenant said in a statement.

He said men from the Civilian Joint Task Force, a vigilante group formed in Boko Haram's bastion Maiduguri to combat the Islamist gunmen who have been terrorising the region for years, entered Dawashe to search for suspects.

Suspected Boko Haram members subsequently opened fire in the village, the spokesman said, adding that the victims were mostly fishermen and traders.

Sani said a dozen other civilians sustained gunshot wounds during the incident but provided no information on casualties among the belligerents.

The toll and circumstances of the incident could not immediately be verified independently.

The MNJTF, a joint military force set up in 1998 to combat border crimes, consists of troops from Nigeria, Chad and Niger.

Its mandate was recently expanded to fight Boko Haram, whose insurgency is estimated to have cost 3,600 lives since 2009, including killings by security forces.

The Cilivian JTF emerged in May after the state of emergency was declared in the region.

It consists of local youths who are generally armed with bows and arrows, machetes, cudgels, and axes but no guns.

The MNJTF has recognised them as an organisation, giving them training and ID cards, and effectively using them as a proxy militia.

The group's knowledge of the terrain and local languages also means it has become a valuable intelligence gathering asset for the government.

Suspected Boko Harm members late Friday attacked youth vigilantes operating in Mainok town, Borno state, killing one of them and injuring another, a military spokesman said.

JTF troops have been deployed to Mainok and surrounding villages in a bid to arrest the attackers, he said, without giving further details.


Source : Sapa-AFP /mm
Date : 28 Jul 2013 21:43
 
Blasts in Nigeria's second city of Kano kill six

A series of explosions rocked Nigeria's second city of Kano on Monday, killing at least six people and sparking panic in a neighbourhood previously targeted by Boko Haram Islamists.

The Sabon Gari area of Kano, where four blasts were reported, is full of outdoor bars and eateries and known for its bustling nightlife.

"We have had some explosions in Sabon Gari this evening. The explosions happened at open-air beer parlours, where people were playing snooker," Kano State Police Commissioner Musa Daura told AFP.

"I can confirm six dead and six others injured," he said, adding that the cause of the blasts was not yet known.

The blame was likely to fall on Boko Haram, the insurgent group which says it is fighting to create an Islamic state in Nigeria's mainly Muslim north.

Residents described the area as being littered with the personal belonging of those who ran in fear once the explosions began.

"There is confusion all over the place," said Chinyere Madu, a fruit vendor. "There were four huge explosions, so huge that they shook the whole area. Everywhere is enveloped in smoke and dust."

She told AFP the scene was too chaotic to assess the extent of the damage, but said she "saw one person carrying someone on his shoulders with bleeding legs."

"My house is not far from there," resident Kola Oyebanji told AFP. "All my windows are shattered."

Idika Tobias, who also lives in the area, told AFP he had visited the blast site and stood amid a "litter of personal effects left behind by people fleeing the area."

"Shoes, bags, cellphones" and other items were scattered around, he explained.

A small church sandwiched between two bars was among the targets, Tobias added.

Another resident who requested anonymity said he heard gunshots ring out after the series of explosions.

Soldiers were reported to have cordoned off the area.

Boko Haram, which has carried out waves of bombings across northern Nigeria, was blamed for coordinated suicide blasts at a bus park in Sabon Gari in March that killed at least 41 people.

Kano has been among the cities hardest hit during Boko Haram's insurgency, even if in recent months it had seen a lull in attacks.

Following a massive coordinated gun and bomb assault in January of 2012 that killed at least 185 people, security forces blanketed the city, setting up checkpoints at many roundabouts and intersections.

Nigeria launched a sweeping offensive against Boko Haram in May, specifically targeting three states to the east of Kano. Since then, the security forces have claimed huge gains against the insurgents, insisting that they have put them on the defensive.

Attacks eased after the offensive was launched but the bloodshed has persisted in some areas.

At least three schools have been attacked in northeastern Nigeria by suspected Boko Haram members.

Over the weekend, clashes between a vigilante group and Boko Haram members left at least 20 people dead in the village of Dawashe in Borno state.

The insurgency is estimated to have claimed more than 3,600 lives since 2009, including killings by the security forces.

Aside from churches and other targets linked to the Christian community, Boko Haram has attacked the security forces, Muslim clerics and various symbols of authority.

The government has tried to explore an amnesty offer to the Islamists, but Boko Haram's leader, Abubakar Shekau, has so far showed no interest in dialogue.

But the group is believed to be made up of various different factions, with Shekau leading the most extreme, hardcore Islamist cell.

Nigeria is Africa's most populous country and top oil producer, roughly divided between a mostly Christian south and predominately Muslim north.

Poverty is endemic, especially in the north and analyst have long-insisted that boosting the north's economic prospects is key to ending the violence.


Source : Sapa-AFP /mm
Date : 30 Jul 2013 02:15
http://dawn.com/news/1032953/blasts-in-nigerias-second-city-of-kano-kill-six

Picture_51f72667ba87a.jpg
 
Bombing Death Toll Rises to 24

The death toll from a series of bombings in a mainly Christian area of the northern Nigerian city of Kano has doubled to 24, a hospital spokesman said on Tuesday.

"We have at the moment 24 dead bodies in our morgue and three patients in our emergency ward from the explosions in Sabon Gari last night," said Aminu Inuwa, spokesman for the Aminu Kano Teaching Hospital in Kano, the largest city in northern Nigeria. "The dead had shrapnel wounds on them."


Source : Sapa-AFP /sdv
Date : 30 Jul 2013 14:59
 
Nigeria says terrorist leader arrested in Niger

The military says the arrest of a Nigerian terrorist leader in neighboring Niger has foiled a plot to regroup and launch more attacks.

A statement from Nigeria's military Wednesday says intelligence agents from both countries had been on the trail of the leader who was arrested Saturday in a border area. It does not identify the leader or his group.

Northeast Nigeria bordering Niger and Chad is in the grips of an Islamic extremist uprising that forced the government to declare a state of emergency in May and flood the area with troops. Hundreds of kilometers of porous borders are patrolled by soldiers from all three nations.

The statement said the arrested leader had fled the clampdown and was recruiting and training militants in Niger for terrorist attacks in Nigeria.


Source : Sapa-AP /sdv
Date : 01 Aug 2013 14:24
 
Two attacks in Northern Nigera kill 35

Thirty-two members of Islamist sect Boko Haram, two soldiers and a police officer died during two attacks in the northern state of Borno, the Nigerian military said Monday.

Boko Haram attacked a police station in Bama as well as a military base in Mallam Fatori in Borno. The hostilities took place Sunday but were reported only a day later.

"During the incidence in Bama, troops recovered the following: four Toyota Hilux vehicles, 10 AK-47 rifles, 10 40mm bombs and three RPG tubes," the spokesman of Nigeria's Joint Task Force, Lieutenant Colonel Sagir Musa, said in a statement.

Borno is one of three northern states that Nigeria's government placed under state of emergency in May to curb violent attacks by Boko Haram. # dpa-NOTEBOOK * * * * The following information is not for publication ## dpa-Contacts - Reporting by: Akanbi Thani - Editing by: Frank Fuhrig


Source : Sapa-dpa /mm/ks
Date : 05 Aug 2013 22:40
 
Agents: 44 Gunned down in Negeria Mosque

Security agents say suspected Islamic militants have gunned down 44 people praying at a mosque in northeast Nigeria.

The mosque was located in Konduga town, some 35 kilometers (22 miles) outside Maiduguri, the capital of Nigeria's Borno state.

A state security service agent and a member of a civilian vigilante group working with the military said Monday they counted the bodies at the mosque after Sunday morning's attack.

The state security agent spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to reporters.

Usman Musa of the civilian group says four of its vigilantes were also killed when they responded to calls for help.

Nigeria has been besieged by an Islamic uprising led by the Boko Haram militant group.


Source : Sapa-AP /mjs
Date : 12 Aug 2013 20:59
 
Security agents say suspected Islamic militants have gunned down 44 people praying at a mosque in northeast Nigeria.

How unusual !!
These militants really are the epitome of the scum of the earth
They need to be removed from the face of the planet, where ever they are found - by any means necessary !
 
19 Killed in Nigerian Uprising

The commander of the military joint task force fighting northeastern Nigeria's Islamic uprising admits 12 soldiers and seven police officers were killed in recent attacks.

Earlier the military had said only two soldiers and one police officer were killed when suspected members of the Boko Haram terrorist network attacked a military base and police outpost near Nigeria's border with Cameroon on August 4.

Major General Jah Ewansiah made the admission when he spoke to the Borno state governor and journalists were present.

He said that despite the losses the task force is "resolute and committed to ensure that peace is completely restored in Borno state, even if it means losing our lives."

Thousands more troops were sent into northeastern Nigeria after a state of emergency was declared mid-May.

Press Association
http://www.independent.ie/world-news/19-killed-in-nigerian-uprising-29489325.html
 
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