Nnamdi
Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja
|
Nigeria has uncovered a
spy cell run by militant Islamist group Boko Haram at the international airport
in the capital Abuja apparently aimed at selecting targets for attack, the
country's national security agency said. In a statement late on Friday, the Department of
State Services (DSS) said it discovered the ring on Monday and was working with
aviation authorities to pre-empt any attack.
President
Muhammadu Buhari has made halting Boko Haram's six-year-old insurgency a
priority, but a Reuters tally shows the jihadist group has killed more than 700
people in Nigeria in bomb attacks and shootings since he came to office on May
29.
The
DSS said it had arrested a 14-year-old boy who said he had been instructed to
spy on the airport's security procedures, including passenger screening and
boarding processes, and report what he had learned.
It
said the man who directed the boy had not been located.
Intelligence/Media
report continues:
"The
service, in liaison with the aviation security of Nnamdi Azikiwe International
Airport, Abuja, disrupted a spying network mounted by the Boko Haram
terrorists," DSS spokesman Tony Opuiyo said in the statement.
"The
service is working closely with major aviation stakeholders, especially the
Aviation Security Department, to forestall any possible attack and to ensure
adequate security at the airports."
Boko
Haram, whose insurgency mainly focuses on the northeast, has carried out some
attacks in Abuja including the bombing of the U.N. headquarters in the city
four years ago, which killed 23 people.
The
insurgents have waged a bloody campaign to create a state adhering to strict
Islamic law in the northeast of Africa's most populous state that has left
thousands dead and forced around 1.5 million people to flee their homes since
2009.
Boko Haram scattered
earlier this tear after an army counter-offensive ousted it from most of the
territory it had gained. But the jihadists have since returned to a strategy of
selective attacks in which they have bombed or fired on targets in public
places such as markets and places of worship.
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