Boko Haram leader, Abubakar Shekau, said a new video released on
Monday that the sect would defeat a regional force fighting terrorism in
Nigeria’s far northeast, Niger and Cameroon.
“Your alliance will not achieve anything. Amass all your weapons and
face us. We welcome you,” AFP quoted Shekau as saying in one of the
three videos posted by the group on YouTube.
Troops from Nigeria have been backed by soldiers from Chad, Cameroon
and Niger in recent weeks because of increased concerns about Boko
Haram’s threat to regional security.
In the second of the latest videos, images of the leader of the
Islamic State group, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, are shown along with archive
footage and a voiceover recalling a battle between British colonial
soldiers and fighters from the Sokoto Caliphate in northern Nigeria.
Shekau has namechecked al-Baghdadi before but appears to be
positioning Boko Haram in a wider jihadi context by showing the Sokoto
Caliphate, which was dismantled by the British in the early 20th
century.
“We never rose up to fight Africa. We rose up to fight the world,” he said.
“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.”
On Sunday, Boko Haram militants waged twin attacks in the town of
Diffa in southeast Niger, opening a new front in its offensive after
repeated attacks in Cameroon’s far northern region.
The six-year uprising has become a regional crisis and on Saturday,
Nigeria, Chad, Niger, Cameroon and Benin agreed to muster 8,700 troops,
police and civilians to fight the group.
But Shekau dismissed the size of the force, which had previously been set at about 7,500.
“You send 7,000 troops? Why don’t you send 70 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.
He 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 challenge comes after the United States said on Friday that
Boko Haram could face a stronger test against more capable regional
forces.
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