Friday, August 2, 2013
Boko Haram Deposes Shekau, Appoints New Leader
Sheikh Abubakar
Shekau, leader of
the violent Islamic sect, Boko Haram, has reportedly been
shot and deposed by members of his own sect, Boko
Haram.
A new leader, Abu Zamira Mohammed, who is the sect’s
leader negotiating with the federal government has been
appointed new leader by the group’s Shura Council.
The group also said that its ceasefire declaration is working,
pointing out that there has not been any suicide bombing
since the declaration. It noted its condemnation of the Yobe
massacre where 40 students were killed, adding that some
politicians now commit murder and ascribe it to Boko
Haram
On the Kano blasts last Monday, which led to the death of
about 45 people, the group blamed it on federal
government’s tardiness in responding to the ceasefire
agreement.
A joint report published yesterday, by Dr. Stephen Davis, a
conflict resolution expert and an adviser to the last three
Nigerian Presidents and Phillip van Niekerk, President of
Calabar Africa, a strategic advisory company focusing on
Africa, and former Editor of South Africa’s Mail &
Guardian newspaper, in the US based online newspaper,
huffingtonpost.com, quoted one Imam Liman Ibrahim,
spiritual leader of Boko Haram, as saying that the change in
leadership was prelude to peace negotiations with the
federal government.
A faction of Boko Haram has entered into a back-channel
dialogue with the government in the search for an elusive
peace to a conflict that has seen multiple suicide bombings,
attacks on government buildings and churches, and has
claimed thousands of lives since 2011.
The Chairman of the Presidential Committee on Dialogue
and Restoration of Peace in the North-East, Tanimu Turaki,
last month announced that his committee had reached an
“understanding for ceasefire” with members of the Jama’atu
Ahlul Sunnah Lih Da’awa Wal Jihad, JAS, more commonly
known as Boko Haram. JAS leadership also nominated five
people to enter peace discussions with the Federal
Government: Abu Liman Ibrahim, Abu Zamira
Mohammed, Abu Adam Maisandari, Kassim Imam Biu and
Mallam Modu Damaturu. In its press statement, JAS said
the ceasefire would be in effect for 60 days, and that during
the period, any attacks in its name or in the name of its
leader, Imam Shekau, would be bogus attacks.
Boko Haram has been in preliminary discussions with
government emissaries since the organisation declared a
ceasefire on June 26. Abu Zamira Mohammed told the
paper that his group was still waiting for the Federal
Government’s response to the ceasefire declaration. The
contacts are still at an early, fragile stage, and there is no
guarantee that the talks will achieve a breakthrough.
The writers said: “It has now come to light that Boko
Haram’s leadership sent representatives to the capital Abuja
on June 25, 2013 where they revealed to the government
that Shekau was no longer their leader.”
Imam Liman Ibrahim, the spiritual leader of Boko Haram,
explained that the teaching of Shekau was becoming
increasingly harsh and began to depart from the Holy
Qu’ran.
“It was harsh, harsh, harsh,” Imam Liman said when
explaining the reasons for the change of leadership.
“The beheadings, the killings, the recent death of students
… this is not the way of the Holy Qu’ran. We could
tolerate it no longer.
“Imam Liman explained that Shekau was given a choice of
joining the peace dialogue with the Nigerian government,
forming his own sect or being killed. Several senior Boko
Haram commanders including Shekau’s Chief of Security
and personal bodyguard, Abdullahi Hassan, have claimed
that Shekau has since been shot in the lower leg, thigh and
shoulder,” the paper went on.
The report said,” Shekau’s exact fate is not known. A video
clip recovered from a Boko Haram camp in the Sambisa
Forest Reserve in the northeast Nigeria, raided by the
military on May 16, shows Shekau limping, providing
confirmation of reports he had been shot.
“However, Shekau has been noticeably absent from recent
public statements and is not one of the leaders who have
engaged with government emissaries. It had been presumed
that Shekau chose to voluntarily leave peace discussions in
the hands of Boko Haram’s leadership group,” the duo
wrote.
The JAS leadership were quoted as citing the Qu’ran as
their inspiration for seeking peace. “In the Holy Qu’ran,
Sura At Tauba: Wa-injanahuu-Lisalmi Faji Nahlahaa, we
are encouraged to seek peace. The Holy Qu’ran also tells us
it is good to negotiate. Sura At Nisa Ayih: Wa-sulhu
Haira.”
In June, the Boko Haram leadership demanded that women
held by the military under the state of the emergency in the
north be released. President Jonathan authorised the release,
which opened the door to the ceasefire and the peace
dialogue.
The report also said “the Boko Haram leadership has
appointed Abubakar Babasani Ibn Yusuf as spokesman to
replace Zamirah. Babasani says the leadership has been
consulting all senior commanders to assure compliance with
the ceasefire. He said commanders as far afield as Niger,
Chad, Sudan and Cameroon have agreed to the ceasefire
and discussions with the Nigerian government on the
subject of a peace deal.”
The June 26 ceasefire announcement has been accompanied
by an absence of suicide bombings, giving credibility to the
new leadership and their intention of signing a peace
accord. However, the administration’s tardiness in
responding to the group’s ceasefire announcement is
believed to have precipitated three car bomb attacks in the
northern city of Kano this week that left at least 15 people
dead.
Other attacks have persisted including the recent horrific
killings of students in Yobe where about 40 students were
incinerated in their school building. The latest Boko Haram
statement is highly critical of the Yobe deaths and denies
responsibility for the attacks.
The leadership blames such atrocities on politicians in the
northeast whom they accuse of arming gangs and
committing crimes in the name of Boko Haram.
Shekau was deputy leader under Boko Haram founder
Imam Mohammed Yusuf who was captured in July 2009 in
fighting in the northeast of Nigeria and executed by
Nigeria’s Police force in what appears to have been an
extrajudicial killing. The interrogation and Yusuf’s bullet-
riddled body were filmed on video.
Yusuf’s death radicalized the Boko Haram leaders and led
them to move underground and identify more closely with
Al Qaeda. Following the founder’s killing, Shekau emerged
as the new leader of a revitalised Boko Haram in 2010 and
he and other commanders refocused the group towards
global jihad.
Shekau launched a series of well-planned assassinations and
suicide bombings that targeted Nigerian police headquarters
and the UN offices in Abuja among many other locations.
Through a series of video appearances on television
stations, notably Al Jazeera, Shekau emerged as the face of
Boko Haram. Earlier this year, the U.S. placed a $7-million
bounty on his head.
The military’s Joint Task Force has recently arrested Alhaji
Mala Othman, Chairman of the opposition All Nigeria
People’s Party in Borno state, the epicentre of the
insurrection, on terrorism charges.
“Jonathan declared a state of emergency on May 14 and
launched a military offensive that has seen some successes.
But reprisal attacks by Boko Haram, including the freeing
of 105 of their members from prison, indicate that without a
peace deal, Boko Haram has the resources to continue the
fight,” the duo wrote. [ Vanguard ]
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