Thursday, 22 January 2015

Shekau Dares Cameroon, Niger and Chad Leaders



Head of Boko Haram insurgents, Abubakar Shek­au, has openly taunted the countries planning a united effort to crush the group.
In a video, where he claimed responsibility for the bloody attack on the Ni­gerian town of Baga on Jan­uary 3, Shekau scorned the presidents of Chad, Cam­eroon and Niger, taunting Chad’s Idriss Deby with the message: “African kings...I challenge you to attack me now. I am ready”.
The Baga attack, in which hundreds of people were killed, was called a crime against humanity by Wash­ington and Paris.
In the video, just emerged on YouTube, Shekau also accused Cameroon Presi­dent, Paul Biya, of being too afraid to ask for help in the face of the group’s ever-increasing belligerence.
Cameroon also suffered repeated attacks recently, including the kidnapping of dozens of people, mostly women and children, during a deadly attack on Sunday.
To Niger’s president, Ma­hamadou Issoufou, whom Shekau noted, commiser­ated with France after the recent Islamist attacks in Paris, said: “Muhammad Yusuf (Mahamadou Issou­fou), is that your job? Ah, ah, ah! Muhammad Yusuf, you will see. President of Niger, you will see”, he said.
Shekau’s provocative vid­eo came as a regional sum­mit opened in Nigeria on Tuesday, aimed at stopping Boko Haram, whose insur­gency had left 13,000 people dead and forced 1.5 million others from their homes since 2009.
Leaders from Ghana and Chad have called for a uni­fied effort against the Is­lamist militants.
Chad sent a convoy of troops and 400 military vehicles on Saturday into neighbouring Cameroon to fight Boko Haram, as Nige­ria’s neighbours appeared to be losing patience with the efforts of the Nigerian Army.
Little is known of “Shek­au”, with some experts and Nigerian security officials insisting that he is, in fact, a composite character, whose role is taken by a rotating cast of different militant fighters.
According to security ser­vices, the original Abuba­kar Shekau was the son of poor farmers, became radicalised while attending theological schools and took over Boko Haram in 2010.
The Nigerian military said, last September, that a man, posing as Shekau in videos posted online, had, in fact, been killed after fighting with troops in the far northeast.
The United States and other experts, however, questioned the credibility of that claim, while Shekau denied it outright in a video obtained by AFP last October.

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