Boko Haram leader, Abubakar Shekau, has announced that
he has created an Islamic caliphate in a city seized by the insurgents earlier
this month in Borno State, northeastern Nigeria.
According to a 52-minute video AFP obtained on Sunday, 24
August, 2014, the Islamist group leader said:
“Thanks be to Allah who gave victory to our brethren in (the town of) Gwoza and made it part of the Islamic caliphate.”
After Shekau’s 25-minute speech, the video shows militant
fighters on pick-up trucks firing rocket-propelled grenades and other heavily
armed insurgents firing weapons as they walk calmly along the road.
The footage appears to show them taking over a military
base, stealing weapons and hundreds of rounds of ammunition as well as fuel
cans.
In one frame, a fighter stands on top of a tank, waving the
Islamists’ black flag.
The end of the video apparently depicts scenes of grisly
executions, similar to those released by Islamic State (IS) in Iraq in recent
weeks. Boko Haram have used similar tactics before, however.
In one scene, about 20 men in civilian clothing are shown
with their hands tied behind their backs and lying by the roadside before they
are shot at close range.
A second shows two men, whom Shekau said disguised
themselves as women to escape the town, beaten to death with shovels. Two
others similarly dressed are shot beside what appears to be a trench full of
bodies.
Shekau is pictured standing in front of three SUVs and
flanked by four fighters, who are masked and armed. It is not clear when or
where the video was filmed.
New Boko Haram video released by press on August 24, 2014.
Snapshot from a video: AFP
There was no indication that Shekau was actually in Gwoza
for the filming and his whereabouts remain unknown but another unidentified
fighter who speaks later in the video vowed that Boko Haram would keep control
of the area.
Shekau, who was blacklisted by the the United Nations
in July, declared that Gwoza, in Borno state, now has “nothing to do with
Nigeria”.
“By the grace of Allah we will not leave the town. We have
come to stay,” Shekau added.
The United Nations humanitarian office confirmed in a report
some weeks ago that Gwoza was under rebel control.
Boko Haram is also believed to be in control of other areas
near Gwoza in southern Borno, as well as large swathes of territory in northern
Borno and at least one town in neighbouring Yobe state.
Mapping the precise areas which have fallen into Islamist
hands is nearly impossible.
There are few humanitarian workers on the ground in the northeast,
travel is dangerous and the region, which has been under a state of emergency
since May of last year, has poor mobile phone coverage.
Experts have described Boko Haram’s gains in recent weeks as
unprecedented, saying the group was closer than ever to achieving its goal of
carving out a strict Islamic state across northern Nigeria.
But many analysts believe the military has the capacity to
reverse the insurgents’ advance.
It would be recalled that some Nigerian soldiers last
week refused to be deployed to Gwoza without better weapons in an apparent
mutiny.
The Boko Haram is believed to have killed thousands of
innocent people since it intensified its insurgency in 2009.
Courtesy of: naij
Well is not new again but what I fall to understand is y n how d millitary n d govt keep giving us fake hope that they are on top of the game with old modus operandi that keeps giving the sect upper hand
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