Nigeria on Monday vowed to defeat
Boko Haram within six weeks as its leader Abubakar Shekau threatened: ‘‘a new
regional fighting force will not achieve anything” even if the rebels launched
fresh cross-border attacks.
National Security Advisor Sambo
Dasuki, who over the weekend secured a delay to Nigeria’s presidential
elections, said “all known Boko Haram camps will be taken out” by the time of
the rescheduled vote.Boko Haram will not be there, they will be dismantled, in
an interview when asked what gains could be made against the Islamists terrorist
group before the new elections date of March 28.
Dasuki Sambo in a statement said:
that even if the goal was not totally achieved “the situation then would surely
be conducive enough for elections”, with no need for a further postponement of
the election.Although Greater regional co-operation made it more likely that
the rebels, whose aim of fighting is to create a hard-line Islamic state have
claimed more than 13,000 lives since 2009, would however be defeated, he said.
However, Boko Haram last week opened
up a new frontier in Niger after sustained attacks in Cameroon’s far northern
region, which led to the deployment of Chadian troops alongside Cameroon forces
to help combat the heat.
The Islamist group has widened its
offensive in recent weeks in the far north-east of Nigeria around Lake Chad
where the borders of all four countries converge.
The Islamist terrorist group earlier
released three new videos on YouTube, one of which records a 28-minute speech
from its leader Abubakar Shekau in an undisclosed location flanked by eight
masked fighters. In the tape, he dismissed the threat from regional forces,
stating: “Your alliance will not achieve anything. Amass all your weapons and
face us. We welcome you.”
However, Nigeria has maintained that
the involvement of troops from Chad and Cameroon is going to be part of an
existing agreement to fight the Islamists terrorist group between countries in
the Lake Chad region.On Saturday, Nigeria and its neighbours Chad, Niger,
Cameroon and Benin came to a closed agreement to muster 8,700 troops, police
and civilians inclusive for a wider, African Union-backed force against Boko
Haram.
Meanwhile Mahamadou Karidjo Niger’s
Defence Minister said: he hoped parliamentary approval would deliver “the final
blow” to Boko Haram, adding that troops were “chomping at the bit to go”.
The size of the new force had
previously been set at about 7,500 but the leader of the terrorist group
Abubakar Shekau, whom the United States have estimated to having between 4,000
to 6,000 fighters at his disposal, dismissed the threat.“You send 7,000 troops?
Why don’t you send seven million? This is small. Only 7,000? By Allah, it is
small. We can seize them one-by-one. We can seize them one-by-one,” he said in
Arabic.
Abubakar Shekau also directly
threatened Chad’s President Idriss Deby, whose forces have attacked Boko Haram
in the northeast Nigerian towns of Gamboru and Malam Fatori in recent days.
Shekau’s speech appeared to put the
Boko Haram insurgency in the wider context of global jihad, possibly in
response to the regional nature of the conflict.
It is also thought that the terrorist
group have a few direct, operational links to jihadi groups elsewhere, which is
believed to include some foreign fighters, most likely paid mercenaries.
Abubakar Shekau also mentioned
groups such as Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) and the leader of the
so-called Islamic State group in Syria and Iraq, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.
In his speech Shekau appears to
broaden the group’s aim: “We never rose up to fight Africa. We rose up to fight
the world.
“We are
going to fight the world on the principle that whoever doesn’t obey Allah and
the Prophet to either obey or die or become a slave.”
Culled from Vanguard
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