Boko Haram Schematics - AFP |
Federal Government on
Monday vowed to crush Boko Haram within six weeks as its leader warned a new
regional fighting force "will not achieve anything" and the rebels
launched fresh cross-border attacks. National Security Advisor Sambo Dasuki,
who this 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.
Demonstrators rally in
support of the Cameroonian army engaged in a multi-national battle against Boko
Haram, on February 7, 2015 in Douala ©Reinnier Kaze (AFP)
|
AFP reported the NSA said
"They won't be there. They will be dismantled," in an interview when
asked what gains could be made against the Islamists before the new polling
date of March 28.
Nigeria has previously
set deadlines to defeat the insurgents that have come and gone. But Dasuki said
that even if the goal was not achieved "the situation then would surely be
conducive enough for elections", with no need for a further postponement
to voting.
Greater regional
co-operation made it more likely that the rebels, whose fight to create a
hardline Islamic state has claimed more than 13,000 lives since 2009, would be
defeated, he said.
Boko Haram last week
opened up a new front in Niger after sustained attacks in Cameroon's far
northern region, which led to the deployment of Chadian troops alongside
Cameroon forces.
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.
On Monday, militant
fighters raided a prison in Diffa, southeast Niger, but were repelled, just
hours before the country's parliament voted on deploying troops for the
regional fight-back.
A deadly explosion then
ripped through a local market, with one local merchant saying: "Everything
blew up -- I saw bodies everywhere."
"There are deaths
and injuries," concurred a local journalist, who says he counted one death
and 15 people injured from the blast who were in Diffa's hospital.
- Threat dismissed -
Boko Haram earlier
released three new videos on YouTube, one of them a 28-minute speech from its
leader Abubakar Shekau in an undisclosed location flanked by eight masked
fighters.
In it, he dismissed the
threat from regional forces, stating: "Your alliance will not achieve
anything. Amass all your weapons and face us. We welcome you."
Nigeria maintains that
the involvement of troops from Chad and Cameroon is part of an existing
agreement to fight the Islamists between countries in the Lake Chad region.
On Saturday, Nigeria and
its neighbours -- Chad, Niger, Cameroon and Benin -- agreed to muster 8,700
troops, police and civilians for a wider, African Union-backed force against
Boko Haram.
Niger's Defence Minister
Mahamadou Karidjo 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 Shekau, whom the United States
estimates as 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.
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.
- Wider context -
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.
In the last six years,
the group has mainly operated in three states in northeast Nigeria, taking over
a succession of towns and villages as part of its aim to create a hardline
Islamic state.
Boko Haram, which is
proscribed as an international terrorist group, has previously been considered
to have essentially "local" aims.
It is thought to have few
direct, operational links to jihadi groups elsewhere, although it is believed
to include some foreign fighters, most likely paid mercenaries.
But Shekau has 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.
One of the three latest
videos shows Baghdadi with archive footage and a voiceover recalling a battle
between British soldiers and fighters from the Sokoto Caliphate in northern
Nigeria.
The Sokoto Caliphate was
dismantled by British colonialists who annexed the northern Islamic kingdoms
and the predominantly Christian south to form Nigeria in the early 20th century.
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."
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