Boko Haram denied that they had agreed to a ceasefire in a new
video
obtained on Friday by AFP, describing the Nigerian government claims as a
lie and apparently ruling out future talks.
The group’s
leader, Abubakar Shekau, also claimed the 219 schoolgirls kidnapped from
the remote northeast town of Chibok, in Borno state, in April had
converted to Islam and been married off.
In addition, Shekau said
the Islamists were holding a German national, who was kidnapped in
Adamawa state, also northeast Nigeria, in July.
The video comes
after a surprise Nigerian military and presidency announcement on
October 17 that a deal had been reached with the militants to end
hostilities.
A senior presidential aide to Goodluck Jonathan also
said agreement had been reached to free the schoolgirls, whose abduction
sparked global anger and demands for their release.
There was
immediate scepticism about both claims because of previous assertions of
ceasefires and the identity of the purported Boko Haram envoy at the
supposed talks, Danladi Ahmadu.
Violence — and fresh kidnappings —
have continued unabated since the announcement, including a triple
bombing of a bus station in the northern city of Gombe on Friday that
killed at least eight.
Nigeria’s government maintains that talks were ongoing in the Chadian capital, Ndjamena.
But
Shekau, speaking in Hausa, dressed in military fatigues and boots with a
black turban, and flanked by 15 armed fighters, said: “We have not made
ceasefire with anyone…
“We did not negotiate with anyone… It’s a
lie. It’s a lie. We will not negotiate. What is our business with
negotiation? Allah said we should not.”
He also said he did not know Danladi.
– Kidnapped girls –
There
was no indication of when or where the video was shot but it was
obtained through the same channels as previous communications from the
group.
In it, Shekau mentions the Chibok girls for the first time
since a video obtained on May 5, when more than 100 were shown in a
rural location dressed in the hijab and reciting verses from the Koran.
Then,
the militant leader said many of the girls had converted to Islam but
in the latest, he indicated that all of those held had become Muslims.
“Don’t
you know the over 200 Chibok schoolgirls have converted to Islam? They
have now memorised two chapters of the Koran,” he said.
Shekau
previously threatened to sell the girls as slave brides and also
suggested that he would be prepared to release them in exchange for Boko
Haram prisoners.
In the latest message, he said while laughing: “We have married them off. They are in their marital homes.”
Human
Rights Watch said in a report published this week that Boko Haram was
holding upwards of 500 women and young girls and that forced marriage
was commonplace in the militant camps.
One former hostage said she
saw some of the Chibok girls forced to cook and clean for other women
and girls who had been chosen for “special treatment because of their
beauty”.
– German national –
Shekau’s claim in the video
that they were “holding your German hostage” is the first claim of
responsibility for the abduction, which happened on July 16.
The German foreign ministry in Berlin said it did not want to comment when contacted by AFP.
Armed
gunmen kidnapped the foreigner, who was said to be a teacher at a
government technical training centre in Gombi, about 100 kilometres (62
miles) from the Adamawa state capital Yola.
Suspicion immediately
fell on Boko Haram, which has repeatedly attacked schools teaching a
so-called Western curriculum, as well as teachers and students.
An
offshoot of Boko Haram, Ansaru, has previously claimed the kidnapping
of at least eight foreigners in northern Nigeria since 2012 but the
group has been largely dormant for more than a year.
The group
reportedly broke with Boko Haram to specifically target foreigners
instead of Nigerians and executed seven expatriates it seized from
Bauchi state in 2013.
In January 2012, Boko Haram kidnapped German
engineer Edgar Raupach at a construction site on the outskirts of the
northern city of Kano.
He was killed in a military raid on a Boko Haram hideout on the outskirts of the city four months later.
Kidnappings
for ransom by criminal gangs are common in the oil-producing south. On
October 24, armed men shot dead one German national and kidnapped
another in Ogun state, southwest Nigeria.
Both were working for the construction firm Julius Berger. The hostage was later released, the company said on Thursday.
Source:PM News
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