Boko Haram rejects talks, threatens attacks in Nigeria
Boko Haram Islamists have ruled out talks with the government and threatened new attacks in Africa’s most populous country, rocked by an insurgency that has killed more than 200 already this year.
Residents in the northern city of Kaduna said the group, which has frequently targetted the police, may have struck again late Saturday when gunmen on motorcycles shot dead a policeman.
Police confirmed the killing early yesterday, but said the attackers were trying to steal the officer’s motorcycle.
Kaduna resident Rabiu Tukur disputed that account.
“They did not make any attempt to take his motorcycle which raised the fear that the attackers could be members of Boko Haram,” he said.
The group’s deadliest ever strike came on January 20, north of Kaduna, in Nigeria’s second city of Kano, where a coordinated set of gun and bomb attacks killed at least 185 people, highlighting the Islamists’ renewed strength.
Boko Haram has already claimed violence that has killed more than 200 people this year in Nigeria, Africa’s top oil producer that is divided between a mainly Muslim and mainly Christian south.
President Goodluck Jonathan has been intensely criticised for his apparent inability to stem the violence and in a media interview this week urged the Islamists to state their demands and enter into dialogue.
But Jonathan’s call for talks was “not sincere”, purported Boko Haram spokesman Abul Qaqa told journalists by telephone in the northeastern city of Maiduguri, regarded as the group’s stronghold.
“We don’t think dialogue is possible under the current situation,” he added.
If captured members of the group were not released, the group “will launch attacks in Sokoto similar to the big Kano attacks,” Qaqa warned. Sokoto is a northwestern city, which is the capital of a state of the same name.
In a recording posted recently on the Internet, the purported head of Boko Haram, Abubakar Muhammad Shekau, said he had ordered the Kano attacks because the army was torturing the group’s members.
“I ordered it and I will give that order again and again,” he said in the recording.
Qaqa said the government had also arrested Boko Haram loyalists in Sokoto. “They should expect imminent attacks on Sokoto if they don’t release our members,” he said, and warned that these illegal detentions had further undermined the possibility of dialogue.
The Boko Haram threat has intensified in recent weeks and the Nigerian security forces have struggled to respond, with the group seemingly able to strike at will.
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