Islamist Militant Group Boko Haram Claims Attack in Nigeria

by The 1 | August 26, 2011 at 03:20 pm
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Nigerian Blast Blamed On Islamic Militant Group Boko Haram

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Nigerian Blast Blamed On Islamic Militant Group Boko Haram

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Nigerian government keen to enter negotiations with Boko Haram

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This is IN THE NEWS in VOA.

http://www.voanews.com/learningenglish/home/world/Boko-Haram-Claims-Nigeria-Attack-128490388.html

A deadly car bombing at the United Nations building in Abuja has brought more attention to an Islamic group. The attack happened Friday morning in the Nigerian capital. Later, a man claiming to represent Boko Haram spoke by telephone with a VOA reporter. He said the group carried out the attack and warned that "this is just the beginning."

The spokesman said the bombing was in reaction to the Nigerian military's increased presence in the northeastern state of Borno. Boko Haram is active there. The government sent more troops after an increase in suspected Boko Haram shootings and bombings.

In the Hausa language, the group's name means "western education is a sin." Boko Haram wants Islamic law or sharia to be established more widely across Africa's most populous nation. Western security officials say Boko Haram may have ties to the north African group known as al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb.

Boko Haram launched a violent uprising in July of two thousand nine. Nigeria's military crushed that unrest. Since then, Boko Haram has attacked police, politicians and community leaders. The group claimed responsibility for a major attack on Abuja's police headquarters in June.

Former VOA reporter Josephine Kamara and her husband work at the UN building in Abuja. She had driven him to work shortly before the explosion. Her husband is safe. She described the destruction to VOA’s Joe DeCapua.

JOSEPHINE KAMARA: “Right now, I’m standing in front of the UN building, Joe and I see the front part of the main UN building. There are shattered windows. Hardly any of the windows are left standing. This building is about three floors, plus the ground floor, making it four floors. All the way up to the top floor, there’s shattered windows, there’s debris. There are mangos, iron rods all over the place. And I see a lot of the UN staffers’ family members are standing out here. Also, it looks like the entire Abuja police force has actually come to the UN building, standing here, trying to get casualties out. Those that are badly hurt have been taken to the hospital.”

In a statement, Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan called the attack, "barbaric, senseless and cowardly." He said his government remains committed to fighting terrorism.

President Obama also called it a "horrific and cowardly attack."

At UN headquarters in New York, Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon spoke to the Security Council.

BAN KI-MOON: "Around eleven o'clock this morning local time, the UN house in the Nigeria capital, Abuja, was struck by a car bomb. These buildings house twenty-six humanitarian and development agencies of the UN family. This was an assault on those who devote their lives to helping others. We condemn this terrible act utterly."

The secretary-general warned that UN offices are increasingly at risk of attacks like the bombing in Abuja.

BAN KI-MOON: "Let me say it clearly: these acts of terrorism are unacceptable. They will not deter us from our vital work for the people of Nigeria and the world. This outrageous and shocking attack is evidence that the UN premises are increasingly being viewed as soft targets by extremist elements around the world."

In December of two thousand seven, a bombing at UN offices in the Algerian capital killed seventeen employees. And in August of two thousand three, a suicide bomber struck the UN headquarters in Baghdad. Twenty-two workers were killed. They included the top UN diplomat in Iraq, Sergio Vieira de Mello of Brazil.

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The 1

Nigeria attack: Islamist militants claim responsibility for UN building blast

Al-Qaida-linked group, Boko Haram, says it was behind the deadly explosion in Abuja that left at least 18 people dead.

Nigeria's capital was on high alert on Friday after an apparent suicide attack on the United Nations headquarters in Abuja stoked fears that Islamist militants were setting their sights on high-profile targets in Africa's most populous country.

"The president believes that the attack is a most despicable assault on the United Nations' objectives of global peace and security, and the sanctity of human life to which Nigeria wholly subscribes,"

 

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Santiago

What a crock, another bogeyman to frighten tv viewers with, so that the sheeple continue to allow the assaults on personal freedoms in America.

0
"thirty-aught-six"

Nigeria, a transit point for heroin and cocaine intended for European, East Asian, and North American markets; consumer of amphetamines; safe haven for Nigerian narcotraffickers operating worldwide; major money-laundering center; massive corruption and criminal activity. Why wouldn't al-Qaeda be moving in? The drug scene in Afghanistan has gotten a little slim and Iran, the largest purchaser of the regions heroin,  doesn't need al-Qaeda to middle for them. I don't doubt Boko Haram and al-Qaeda could build up a fairly large gang inside Nigeria in no time. The government is pretty corrupt stashing petro-dollars into Swiss Banks as fast as they can.

0
The 1

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/world/africa-mideast/boko-haram-claims-responsibility-for-suicide-bombing-in-nigeria/article2144177/

In the apparent suicide bombing, an explosives-laden car smashed through two security barriers and blew up inside the glass-walled entrance of the building where about 400 UN employees work. Bodies and body parts were left strewn around the compound after the explosion, which destroyed the lower floors of the building.

It was one of the deadliest attacks on the UN anywhere in the world in the past decade, and it represented a dramatic escalation of Boko Haram’s terrorism campaign. By choosing an international target for the first time, and by using the same technology as foreign terrorists, Boko Haram appears to be signalling its links with al-Qaeda and its network of militant organizations in the Middle East and Africa.

“It’s like an initiation requirement for al-Qaeda,” said Martin Ewi, an international crime researcher at the Institute for Security Studies, an African think-tank based in Pretoria.

“They’re trying to demonstrate their weaponry and their sophistication. The tactic is purely international. They’re taking the same track as al-Qaeda – they start as a domestic organization, then they join al-Qaeda and they have to prove that they have an international profile.”

Two other African militant groups have forged links with al-Qaeda in recent years. One is al-Shabab, the radical Islamist militia that is battling the Western-backed peacekeeping force in Somalia. The other is Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, based in the Sahel region of northern and western Africa, which was responsible for the kidnapping of Canadian diplomats Robert Fowler and Louis Guay in Niger in 2008.

Until 2006, suicide bombings were unknown in Africa. But they became common in Somalia after al-Shabab developed its connections to al-Qaeda, and this year they are surfacing in Nigeria for the first time. In June, Boko Haram used a suicide bombing to kill several people at the Nigerian police headquarters in Abuja.

General Carter Ham, commander of U.S. military operations in Africa, said last week that Boko Haram has already made contacts with al-Qaeda and al-Shabab, and has a clear intent to “co-ordinate and synchronize” with AQIM. Both the Somali group and the Sahel group have ranged beyond their domestic borders to attack foreign targets, including UN employees.

Boko Haram has publicly praised al-Qaeda and claimed that its members have received training in Somalia from al-Shabab fighters. It has also reportedly kidnapped a Briton and an Italian in northern Nigeria, and turned them over to AQIM.

Statements by AQIM this year have sometimes praised Boko Haram and offered weaponry to the Nigerian Islamist organization. There is also video evidence to suggest that AQIM has a number of members from northern Nigeria.

The decision to build links with al-Qaeda is “a survival strategy” for groups such as Boko Haram and al-Shabab, which could otherwise suffer a decline in their membership, Mr. Ewi said. “It provides them with international recruitment, so they can get operatives from all over the world.”

Andrew Lebovich, a policy analyst at the New America Foundation who studies terrorism in the Middle East and North Africa, cautioned that there is no concrete proof of operational links between Boko Haram and al-Qaeda. But an “increased ideological alignment” between the two groups is “entirely possible,” he said.

Alex Thurston, a U.S. scholar who studies religion and politics in the Sahel, said there is “significant circumstantial evidence” of a connection between Boko Haram and al-Qaeda-linked groups in Somalia and the Sahel. The attack on the UN compound in Abuja may have been aimed at embarrassing the Nigerian government and showing that its military deployment in northern Nigeria cannot stop the group from carrying out major attacks, he said.

Boko Haram, whose name literally means “Western education is a sin,” seeks to destroy secular government and create a strictly Islamic state in the Muslim regions of northern Nigeria. The group was created in 2002 by a Muslim cleric, Mohammed Yusuf. It was peaceful at first, but in 2009 it launched an armed uprising in northern Nigeria.

Its rebellion was crushed by the Nigerian military, leaving more than 800 people dead. Most of the dead were Boko Haram members, including Mr. Yusuf himself, who was killed in police custody.

Since then, the group has gone underground, and its command structure is mysterious. But it has shown an ability to organize across many regions of Nigeria.

Analysts say the rise of Boko Haram is more than a religious phenomenon. It has capitalized on widespread anger at government corruption, poverty and unemployment.

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