The leader of Boko Haram, Abubakar Shekau, has in a new video threatened more attacks on Nigerians even as he vowed to bomb Nigerian oil facilities.Boko Haram Leader, Shekau, Issues More Threats
— February 21, 2014
Shekau, who spoke confidently in the video amidst sarcastic leering, said the state of emergency had not in anyway hindered the sect’s operations.
He reiterated his hate for western democracy and education and claimed that his group killed Sheikh Muhammad Awwal Adam Albani, among other claims.
However, the students of late Sheikh Muhammad Awwal Adam Albani yesterday debunks Shekau’s claim that Boko Haram killed their teacher, saying it was a falsehood meant to deceive Nigerians and the world in general.
Reacting to media reports on a new video that was purportedly released by Boko Haram leader claiming responsibility for Albani’s assassination, spokesperson of late cleric’s students, Dr Abdulganiyu Abdulrafi’u, described the video as a plot to stop investigation on the killing of the cleric.
“We have said it times without number that we don’t believe in the existence of any terror group known as Boko Haram. Of course, we are aware of a group under late Muhammad Yusuf, but the name of the Muhammad Yusuf-led group is just being used to destabilise Muslims and for committing crime under its guise.
“Therefore, nobody can deceive us by saying that it is ‘a ghost group’ that killed our teacher. Our teacher was not killed by ghosts. Our call remains that the relevant agencies should fish the killers out. We are therefore patiently waiting for them to do their job,” Dr Abdulrafi’u said.
He further explained that the reason given by Shekau for killing Sheikh Albani strengthened the belief of Albani’s students that there was nothing like Boko Haram.
Meanwhile the chief of army staff (COAS), Lt.-Gen Kenneth Minimah and the Chief of Air Force(CAS), Air Marshal Adekunle Amosu, yesterday returned to Abuja after a three-day operational visit to Adamawa and Borno states over the ongoing counter-insurgent war.
The two officers visited troops deployed on Operation Zaman Lafia in Borno, Yobe and Adamawa states in the ongoing military operations against insurgents in Borno, Yobe and Adamawa states.
Addressing the troops during the visit to their different locations, the army chief advised them to make discipline their watchword at all times and remain resolute in the face of security challenges facing the country.
Gen Minimah reminded the troops of their responsibility as soldiers, noting that as professional soldiers, they must rise to the defence of their fatherland and not yield any ground to the forces of evil under any circumstances- Nigeria’s most deadly islamic sect, Boko Haram, has just exploded
mutiple bombs in the city of Kano. Curfew has been imposed and the city-
the state and the entire nation is engulfed in tension, fear and
uncertainty. Several lives have reportedly been lost. This group appears
unrelenting in its murderous campaign.
Kano has joined the ranks of northern states-Bornu, Yobe, Adamawa, Plateau, Niger where the terror of Boko Haram holds sway. Religious crisis orchestrated by muslim fundamentalists is not new to this northern city but these attacks have brought a frightening dimension to islamic militancy in the region.
The Spokesperson of Boko Haram, Abdul Qaqa, told journalists that they carried out the attacks on the city because the authorities had refused to release their members arrested and detained by the police. So with these attacks, Boko Haram has sent very clear signals to the authorities in Kano and beyond- “Capitulate”, “Surrender”, “Do our Bidding”, “Join forces with us”, “Embrace our cause” or “Be destroyed”. Since last year, Boko Haram has carried out bomb attacks on several institutions including the UN building and police headquarters in Abuja. This militant group has targeted churches and southerners or anyone they percieved to be opposed to their cause of implementing sharia and enthroning political islam. It has declared a war on anybody muslims as well as non muslims opposed to or critical of its cause. This is characteristic of the totalitarian nature of political islam- a social political and economic order based on sharia.
A fringe movement that started with a group of islamic preachers on the streets of Maiduguri a few years ago, has turned to a real threat to Nigeria’s corporate existence and a terror to the world.
Unfortunately, most analysts continue to shy away from the truth- the bitter truth that Boko Haram is an islamist group with a political agenda. Boko Haram is a jihadist organization that has declared war against anybody that is really or imagined to be opposed to its cause. Instead many analysts continue to blame the attacks and crisis orchestrated by this militant sect on the injustices, poverty and marginalization of the North. Some commentators have made it seem as if Boko Haram are northern equivalent of the Niger Delta militants fighting to address social, economic and political marginalization of the region. Even when the group has made it clear that they are opposed to western education and want sharia implemented in Nigeria. Boko Haram militants are not asking for jobs. They are not agitating for any finacial reward or compensation. Their cause is religious. Thier agenda is islamists.
They are just a bunch of islamic militants and nihilists who want to turn Nigeria into an islamic empire by force.
Nigerians must begin to acknowledge the jihadist agenda of Boko Haram and try to find out how the teachings of Islam particularly as contained in the Koran or the Hadith were propagated or twisted to breed this terrible monster.
We need to know how these militants are being motivated to embark on this self destructive mission. We need to identify the cells and networks that are recruiting, training and brainwashing these militants.
We in Nigeria must stop decieving ourselves by saying that the Boko Haram attacks have nothing to do with religion. Or that they have nothing to do with Islam. This is not true. Though people can carry out such heinous attacks for other reasons, or be motivated by other secular causes. From the pattern of their attacks, the Boko Haram phenomenon has a lot to do with religion particularly islam. It is the Nigerian version of al Qaeda. The militants are not bombing police stations, UN building and churches for the sake of it. They are not agitating for sharia law for the fun of it. The Boko Haram militants are fighting a holy war. They are prosecuting a jihad for which they expect to be rewarded abundantly in the hereafter with some virgins. That is why the group has not run out of suicide bombers. That is why they have their operational base in the muslim majority states.
Boko Haram militants have been brainwashed by few islamic clerics to believe that they are 'Hezbollah'- the army of Allah. They have been deluded to think that these suicide bomb attacks and other murderous acts they carry out are religious duties in line with the will of Allah and in furtherance of Islam. Nigerian authorities must acknowledge and address the ‘islamic’ roots of the Boko Haram menace now, before it is too late.
Saturday, 1 March 2014
boko
Nigerian Islamists kill 12 in village attacks - witnesses
YOLA, Nigeria
(Reuters) - Gunmen from Islamist sect Boko Haram shot dead at least 12
people during a four-hour siege on villages in northeast Nigeria
overnight, two days after a deadly attack on a school, witnesses said on
Thursday.
Boko Haram, whose fight for an Islamic state in northern Nigeria has killed thousands and made them the biggest threat to security in Africa's top oil producer, is increasingly preying on the civilian population.
Gunmen riding in 13 pick-up trucks sped into Kirchinga village in Adamawa state in the evening, burning churches and houses and shooting sporadically at fleeing villagers, residents said.
The insurgents chased residents into neighbouring Shuwa village, where they torched the house of a local bishop, a theological school and a police station.
The owner of a bakery, Martha Yakubu, said she counted 12 dead bodies, including two of her workers. Banks, small schools and dozens of houses were attacked.
The military said in a statement that six members of Boko Haram, one soldier and three civilians were killed in the fighting. Nigerian authorities often play down the military's own casualties and those of civilians, security sources say.
The villages are in a hilly region running along the Cameroon border where soldiers have struggled to pin down insurgents who hide in rugged terrain and launch guerrilla attacks on areas they accuse of being pro-government.
Boko Haram gunmen killed 59 pupils at a boarding school in Yobe state, in the northeast close to Adamawa, in the early hours of Tuesday, in an attack President Goodluck Jonathan called "callous and senseless murder".
Western governments are concerned about Nigerian groups like Boko Haram linking up with al Qaeda-linked cells in other countries in the Sahel region, like Mali, where France sent troops a year ago to oust Islamist militants.
"Today Nigeria is facing the terrorism of Boko Haram," French President Francois Hollande said on Thursday during the West African country's 100 year anniversary celebrations in the capital Abuja.
"I assure you...your fight is our fight and we will always be ready to not only give you political support, but our help every time it is necessary," Hollande added, without giving details of what help was on offer.
Jonathan's troops are struggling to stem Boko Haram's insurgency, although they have restricted attacks mainly to the country's remote northeast corner in recent months, far away from commercial capitals and southern oil fields.
Militants from Boko Haram, whose name means "Western education is sinful" in the northern Hausa language, have frequently attacked schools in the past. A similar attack in June in the nearby village of Mamudo left 22 students dead.
They have killed more than 300 people this month, mostly civilians, including in two attacks last week that killed around 100 each, one in which militants razed a whole village and shot panicked residents as they tried to flee.
Boko Haram, whose fight for an Islamic state in northern Nigeria has killed thousands and made them the biggest threat to security in Africa's top oil producer, is increasingly preying on the civilian population.
Gunmen riding in 13 pick-up trucks sped into Kirchinga village in Adamawa state in the evening, burning churches and houses and shooting sporadically at fleeing villagers, residents said.
The insurgents chased residents into neighbouring Shuwa village, where they torched the house of a local bishop, a theological school and a police station.
The owner of a bakery, Martha Yakubu, said she counted 12 dead bodies, including two of her workers. Banks, small schools and dozens of houses were attacked.
The military said in a statement that six members of Boko Haram, one soldier and three civilians were killed in the fighting. Nigerian authorities often play down the military's own casualties and those of civilians, security sources say.
The villages are in a hilly region running along the Cameroon border where soldiers have struggled to pin down insurgents who hide in rugged terrain and launch guerrilla attacks on areas they accuse of being pro-government.
Boko Haram gunmen killed 59 pupils at a boarding school in Yobe state, in the northeast close to Adamawa, in the early hours of Tuesday, in an attack President Goodluck Jonathan called "callous and senseless murder".
Western governments are concerned about Nigerian groups like Boko Haram linking up with al Qaeda-linked cells in other countries in the Sahel region, like Mali, where France sent troops a year ago to oust Islamist militants.
"Today Nigeria is facing the terrorism of Boko Haram," French President Francois Hollande said on Thursday during the West African country's 100 year anniversary celebrations in the capital Abuja.
"I assure you...your fight is our fight and we will always be ready to not only give you political support, but our help every time it is necessary," Hollande added, without giving details of what help was on offer.
Jonathan's troops are struggling to stem Boko Haram's insurgency, although they have restricted attacks mainly to the country's remote northeast corner in recent months, far away from commercial capitals and southern oil fields.
Militants from Boko Haram, whose name means "Western education is sinful" in the northern Hausa language, have frequently attacked schools in the past. A similar attack in June in the nearby village of Mamudo left 22 students dead.
They have killed more than 300 people this month, mostly civilians, including in two attacks last week that killed around 100 each, one in which militants razed a whole village and shot panicked residents as they tried to flee.
(This story corrects day of story to Thursday)
(Additional reporting by John Irish in Paris; Writing by Joe Brock; Editing by Angus MacSwan)
BOKO HARAM HISTORY AND ORIGIN
The Congregation of the People of Tradition for Proselytism and Jihad[2][3] (Arabic: جماعة اهل السنة للدعوة والجهاد Jamāʻat Ahl as-Sunnah lid-daʻwa wal-Jihād)—better known by its Hausa name Boko Haram (pronounced [bōːkòː hàrâm], "Western education is sinful")[4]—is an Islamic jihadist and takfiri militant and terrorist organization based in the northeast of Nigeria,[5] north Cameroon and Niger.[6][7][8][9] Founded by Mohammed Yusuf in 2002,[10] the organisation seeks to establish a "pure" Islamic state ruled by sharia law,[11] putting a stop to what it deems "Westernization."[12][13] The group is known for attacking Christians and government targets,[12] bombing churches, attacking schools and police stations,[14][15] kidnapping western tourists, but has also assassinated members of the Islamic establishment.[16] Violence linked to the Boko Haram insurgency has resulted in an estimated 10,000 deaths between 2001 and 2013.[17][18][19][20][21][22]
The group exerts influence in the northeastern Nigerian states of Borno, Adamawa, Kaduna, Bauchi, Yobe and Kano. In this region, a state of emergency has been declared. The group does not have a clear structure or evident chain of command[23] and has been called "diffuse"[16] with a "cell-like structure" facilitating factions and splits.[11] It is reportedly divided into three factions[12] with a splinter group known as Ansaru. The group's main leader is Abubakar Shekau. Its weapons expert, second-in-command and arms manufacturer was Momodu Bama.
Whether it has links to jihadist groups outside Nigeria is disputed. According to one US military commander, Boko Haram is likely linked to Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM),[24][25] but others have found no evidence of material international support,[26] and attacks by the group on international targets have so far been limited.[11] On November 13, 2013 the United States government designated the group as a terrorist organisation.
Many of the group's senior radicals were reportedly partially inspired by the late Islamic preacher known as Maitatsine.[27][28] Others believe the group is motivated by inter-ethnic disputes as much as religion, and that its founder Yusuf believed there was a campaign of “ethnic cleansing” by Plateau State governor Jonah Jang against the Hausa and Fulani people.[11] Amnesty International has accused the Nigerian government of human rights abuses after 950 suspected Boko Haram militants died in detention facilities run by Nigeria's military Joint Task Force in the first half of 2013.[29] The conflicts have left around 90,000 people displaced.[30] Human Rights Watch claims that Boko Haram uses child soldiers, including 12 year olds.[31]
The group has adopted its official name to be "the Congregation of the People of Tradition for Proselytism and Jihad",[32] which is the English translation from Arabic[33] Jamā'at ahl as-sunnah li-d-da'wa wa-l-jihād (جماعة أهل السنة للدعوة والجهاد).
In the town of Maiduguri, where the group was formed, the residents dubbed it Boko Haram. The term "Boko Haram" comes from the Hausa word boko figuratively meaning "western education" (literally "alphabet", from English "book") and the Arabic word haram figuratively meaning "sin" (literally, "forbidden").[34][35][36][37] The name, loosely translated from Hausa, means "western education is forbidden". The group earned this name by its strong opposition to anything Western, which it sees as corrupting Muslims.[38] However, this interpretation of the name is disputed, and locals who speak the Hausa language are unsure what it means.[39]
Dr Ahmad Murtada of the Islamic Studies Department, University of Bayero, Kano has noted in his research of the group that the name of the movement should not be understood literally from the Hausa, but rather as meaning "traversing the Western system of education is haram".[40]
The members of the group do not interact with the local Muslim population[42] and have carried out assassinations in the past of anyone who criticises it, including Muslim clerics.[38][43][44]
In a 2009 BBC interview, Mohammed Yusuf, then leader of the group, stated his belief that the fact of a spherical Earth is contrary to Islamic teaching and should be rejected, along with Darwinian evolution and the fact of rain originating from water evaporated by the sun.[45] Before his death, Yusuf reiterated the group's objective of changing the current education system and rejecting democracy.[46] Nigerian academic Hussain Zakaria told BBC News that the controversial cleric had a graduate education, spoke proficient English, lived a lavish lifestyle and drove a Mercedes-Benz.[45]
In the wake of the 2009 crackdown on its members and its subsequent reemergence, the growing frequency and geographical range of attacks attributed to Boko Haram have led some political and religious leaders in the north to the conclusion that the group has now expanded beyond its original religious composition to include not only Islamic militants, but criminal elements and disgruntled politicians as well. For instance Borno State Governor Kashim Shettima said of Boko Haram: “[they have] become a franchise that anyone can buy into. It's something like a Bermuda Triangle.”[47] The group has also forcibly converted non-Muslims to Islam.[48]
Dr Ahmad Murtada of the Islamic Studies Department, University of Bayero, Kano has noted in his research into Mohammed Yusuf and Boko Haram that the core principles of the group are: an emphasis on 'Hakimiyyah' [sovereignty to God's law]; a belief that they are the "Saved Sect" mentioned in the Prophetic Tradition of Islam; prohibiting studying in Western educational centres of learning as they consider them to be based on non-Islamic traditions and colonialism, they thus criticise Saudi Arabia for its usage of "Western" educational methods; prohibiting working in any governmental institution or civil service role; a contorted interpretation of the edicts of scholars from the classical tradition such as Ibn Taymiyyah to support their rebellions and use of violence; post-2009 a close relationship with al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb and further incorporation into the global Jihadi and Takfiri worldview. Boko Haram have thus been widely rejected and repudiated by adherents of the Salafi tradition in Nigeria.[40]
The Sultan of Sokoto Sa'adu Abubakar, the spiritual leader of Nigerian Muslims, has called the sect "anti-Islamic" and, as reported by the website AllAfrica.com, "an embarrassment to Islam."[50]
The Coalition of Muslim Clerics in Nigeria (CMCN) have called on the Boko Haram to disarm and embrace peace.[51]
The Islamic Circle of North America,[52] the Islamic Supreme Council of Canada,[53] the Muslim Council of Britain,[54] the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation[55] and the Council on American Islamic Relations[56] have all condemned the group.
One of the most famous such fundamentalists was Mohammed Marwa, also known as Maitatsine, who was at the height of his notoriety during the 1970s and 1980s. He was sent into exile by the Nigerian authorities, he refused to believe Muhammad was the Prophet and instigated riots in the country which resulted in the deaths of thousands of people. Some analysts view Boko Haram as an extension of the Maitatsine riots.[57]
Yusuf officially founded the group in 2002 in the city of Maiduguri with the aim of establishing a Shari'a government in Borno State under then-Senator Ali Modu Sheriff.[57] He established a religious complex that included a mosque and a school where many poor families from across Nigeria and from neighbouring countries enrolled their children.[38]
The centre had ulterior political goals and soon it was also working as a recruiting ground for future jihadis to fight the state.[38] The group includes members who come from neighbouring Chad and Niger and speak only Arabic.[59]
In 2004 the complex was relocated to Yusuf's home state of Yobe in the village Kanamma near the Niger border.[46]
Human Rights Watch researcher Eric Guttschuss told IRIN News that Yusuf successfully attracted followers from unemployed youth "by speaking out against police and political corruption." Abdulkarim Mohammed, a researcher on Boko Haram, added that violent uprisings in Nigeria are ultimately due to "the fallout of frustration with corruption and the attendant social malaise of poverty and unemployment."[60] Chris Kwaja, a Nigerian university lecturer and researcher, asserts that “religious dimensions of the conflict have been misconstrued as the primary driver of violence when, in fact, disenfranchisement and inequality are the root causes”. Nigeria, he points out, has laws giving regional political leaders the power to qualify people as 'indigenes' (original inhabitants) or not. It determines whether citizens can participate in politics, own land, obtain a job, or attend school. The system is abused widely to ensure political support and to exclude others. Muslims have been denied indigene-ship certificates disproportionately often.[61] Nigerian opposition leader Buba Galadima says: "What is really a group engaged in class warfare is being portrayed in government propaganda as terrorists in order to win counter-terrorism assistance from the West."[62]
The group conducted its operations more or less peacefully during the first seven years of its existence.[5]
That changed in 2009 when the Nigerian government launched an
investigation into the group's activities following reports that its
members were arming themselves.[98]
Prior to that the government reportedly repeatedly ignored warnings
about the increasingly militant character of the organisation, including
that of a military officer.[98]
When the government came into action, several members of the group were arrested in Bauchi, sparking deadly clashes with Nigerian security forces which led to the deaths of an estimated 700 people. During the fighting with the security forces Boko Haram fighters reportedly "used fuel-laden motorcycles" and "bows with poison arrows" to attack a police station.[99] The group's founder and then leader Mohammed Yusuf was killed during this time while in police custody.[100][101][102] After Yusuf's killing, a new leader emerged whose identity was not known at the time.[103]
In January 2012, Abubakar Shekau, a former deputy to Yusuf, appeared in a video posted on YouTube. According to Reuters, Shekau took control of the group after Yusuf's death in 2009.[105] Authorities had previously believed that Shekau died during the violence in 2009.[106]
On 14 May 2013, President Goodluck Jonathan declared a state of emergency in the states of Borno, Yobe, and Adamawa in a bid to fight the activities of Boko Haram. He ordered the Nigerian Armed Forces to the three areas around Lake Chad.[108] As of 17 May, Nigerian armed forces' shelling in Borno resulted in at least 21 deaths.[109] A curfew was imposed in Maiduguri as the military used air strikes and shellings to target Boko Haram strongholds.[110] The Nigerian state imposed a blockade on the group's traditional base of Maiduguri in Borno in order to re-establish Nigeria's "territorial integrity."[111]
On 21 May, the Defence Ministry issued a statement that read it had "secured the environs of New Marte, Hausari, Krenoa, Wulgo and Chikun Ngulalo after destroying all the terrorists' camps." Armed Forces Spokesman in Borno Lieutenant Colonel Sagir Musa said that the curfew that had been imposed was not relaxed with the curfew timings being 18:00 to 7:00, however there was minimal traffic in Maiduguri.[112]
On 29 May, Boko Haram's leader Abubakar Shekau, following military claims that the group had been halted,[113] released a video in which he said the group had not lost to the Nigerian armed forces. In the video he showed charred military vehicles and bodies dressed in military fatigues. While he called on Muslims from Iraq, Pakistan, Afghanistan and Syria to join his jihad, he said in Arabic and Hausa:[114]
Videos were later released showing the alleged bodies of Boko Haram fighters and civilians, including women and children, that died as a result of the military's fighting.[116][citation needed] The people of Maiduguri were unhappy with the declaration of war on the group and instead said the issues of poverty and inequality needed to be tackled first.[117]
It was announced that Shekau was shot in a firefight on 30 June in the Sambisa forest. Nigeria's military said that he likely died between 25 July and 3 August after being secretly taken to Cameroon to receive treatment. He had been described as "the most dreaded and wanted" Boko Haram leader and the United States had recently offered a US$7m bounty for information leading to his arrest.[118]
The group is also known for using motorcycles as a vehicle to assassinating government officials and security officers. This has led to motorcycle bans in the city of Maiduguri.[119]
It was gathered that the group uses the Internet to propagate its activities and enhance its radicalisation and circulation of extremist ideologies. Boko Haram is reportedly planning to greatly increase its following in many states. Talk of Naija reported that Boko Haram has been involved in a recruitment drive, and they are allegedly targeting Muslims between ages of 17 and 30, and have also been recruiting freed prisoners through prison breaks. The group is also known to assign non-Kanuris on suicide missions.[58]
It is believed to be partially funded by bank robberies.[16]
It is also believed to be funded by other Islamist groups. In February 2012, recently arrested officials revealed that "while the organisation initially relied on donations from members, its links with Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, AQIM, opened it up to more funding from groups in Saudi Arabia and the UK". They went on to say that other sources of funding included the Al Muntada Trust Fund and the Islamic World Society.[123]
The group also extorts local governments for so-called "protection money". A spokesman of Boko Haram claimed that Kano state governor Ibrahim Shekarau and Bauchi state governor Isa Yuguda had paid them monthly.[124][125]
Since Boko Haram is recognised by the U.S.
The group exerts influence in the northeastern Nigerian states of Borno, Adamawa, Kaduna, Bauchi, Yobe and Kano. In this region, a state of emergency has been declared. The group does not have a clear structure or evident chain of command[23] and has been called "diffuse"[16] with a "cell-like structure" facilitating factions and splits.[11] It is reportedly divided into three factions[12] with a splinter group known as Ansaru. The group's main leader is Abubakar Shekau. Its weapons expert, second-in-command and arms manufacturer was Momodu Bama.
Whether it has links to jihadist groups outside Nigeria is disputed. According to one US military commander, Boko Haram is likely linked to Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM),[24][25] but others have found no evidence of material international support,[26] and attacks by the group on international targets have so far been limited.[11] On November 13, 2013 the United States government designated the group as a terrorist organisation.
Many of the group's senior radicals were reportedly partially inspired by the late Islamic preacher known as Maitatsine.[27][28] Others believe the group is motivated by inter-ethnic disputes as much as religion, and that its founder Yusuf believed there was a campaign of “ethnic cleansing” by Plateau State governor Jonah Jang against the Hausa and Fulani people.[11] Amnesty International has accused the Nigerian government of human rights abuses after 950 suspected Boko Haram militants died in detention facilities run by Nigeria's military Joint Task Force in the first half of 2013.[29] The conflicts have left around 90,000 people displaced.[30] Human Rights Watch claims that Boko Haram uses child soldiers, including 12 year olds.[31]
The group has adopted its official name to be "the Congregation of the People of Tradition for Proselytism and Jihad",[32] which is the English translation from Arabic[33] Jamā'at ahl as-sunnah li-d-da'wa wa-l-jihād (جماعة أهل السنة للدعوة والجهاد).
In the town of Maiduguri, where the group was formed, the residents dubbed it Boko Haram. The term "Boko Haram" comes from the Hausa word boko figuratively meaning "western education" (literally "alphabet", from English "book") and the Arabic word haram figuratively meaning "sin" (literally, "forbidden").[34][35][36][37] The name, loosely translated from Hausa, means "western education is forbidden". The group earned this name by its strong opposition to anything Western, which it sees as corrupting Muslims.[38] However, this interpretation of the name is disputed, and locals who speak the Hausa language are unsure what it means.[39]
Dr Ahmad Murtada of the Islamic Studies Department, University of Bayero, Kano has noted in his research of the group that the name of the movement should not be understood literally from the Hausa, but rather as meaning "traversing the Western system of education is haram".[40]
Ideology
Boko Haram was founded as an indigenous group, turning itself into a Jihadist group in 2009.[5] It proposes that interaction with the Western world is forbidden, and also supports opposition to the Muslim establishment and the government of Nigeria.[41]The members of the group do not interact with the local Muslim population[42] and have carried out assassinations in the past of anyone who criticises it, including Muslim clerics.[38][43][44]
In a 2009 BBC interview, Mohammed Yusuf, then leader of the group, stated his belief that the fact of a spherical Earth is contrary to Islamic teaching and should be rejected, along with Darwinian evolution and the fact of rain originating from water evaporated by the sun.[45] Before his death, Yusuf reiterated the group's objective of changing the current education system and rejecting democracy.[46] Nigerian academic Hussain Zakaria told BBC News that the controversial cleric had a graduate education, spoke proficient English, lived a lavish lifestyle and drove a Mercedes-Benz.[45]
In the wake of the 2009 crackdown on its members and its subsequent reemergence, the growing frequency and geographical range of attacks attributed to Boko Haram have led some political and religious leaders in the north to the conclusion that the group has now expanded beyond its original religious composition to include not only Islamic militants, but criminal elements and disgruntled politicians as well. For instance Borno State Governor Kashim Shettima said of Boko Haram: “[they have] become a franchise that anyone can buy into. It's something like a Bermuda Triangle.”[47] The group has also forcibly converted non-Muslims to Islam.[48]
Dr Ahmad Murtada of the Islamic Studies Department, University of Bayero, Kano has noted in his research into Mohammed Yusuf and Boko Haram that the core principles of the group are: an emphasis on 'Hakimiyyah' [sovereignty to God's law]; a belief that they are the "Saved Sect" mentioned in the Prophetic Tradition of Islam; prohibiting studying in Western educational centres of learning as they consider them to be based on non-Islamic traditions and colonialism, they thus criticise Saudi Arabia for its usage of "Western" educational methods; prohibiting working in any governmental institution or civil service role; a contorted interpretation of the edicts of scholars from the classical tradition such as Ibn Taymiyyah to support their rebellions and use of violence; post-2009 a close relationship with al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb and further incorporation into the global Jihadi and Takfiri worldview. Boko Haram have thus been widely rejected and repudiated by adherents of the Salafi tradition in Nigeria.[40]
Criticism
Dr Mu’azu Babangida Aliyu, the Niger State governor, has criticized the group, saying, "Islam is known to be a religion of peace and does not accept violence and crime in any form" and Boko Haram doesn't represent Islam.[49]The Sultan of Sokoto Sa'adu Abubakar, the spiritual leader of Nigerian Muslims, has called the sect "anti-Islamic" and, as reported by the website AllAfrica.com, "an embarrassment to Islam."[50]
The Coalition of Muslim Clerics in Nigeria (CMCN) have called on the Boko Haram to disarm and embrace peace.[51]
The Islamic Circle of North America,[52] the Islamic Supreme Council of Canada,[53] the Muslim Council of Britain,[54] the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation[55] and the Council on American Islamic Relations[56] have all condemned the group.
History
Background
Main articles: Islam in Nigeria and Colonial Nigeria
Before colonisation and subsequent annexation into the British Empire, the Bornu Empire ruled the territory where Boko Haram is currently active. It was a sovereign sultanate run according to the principles of the Constitution of Medina, with a majority Kanuri Muslim population. The Bornu Sultanate emerged after the overthrow of the Kanem-Bornu Empire ruled by the Sayfawa dynasty for over 2000 years.[citation needed] The Bornu Sultanate of the Kanuri is distinct from the Sokoto Caliphate of the Hausa/Fulani established in 1802 by the military conquest of Usman dan Fodio.[5]
Both the Bornu Sultanate and Sokoto Caliphate came under control of the
British in 1903. During this period Christian missionaries used western
education as a tool for evangelism, this has lead to secular education
being viewed with suspicion by many in the local population.[38] Increased dissatisfaction gave rise to many fundamentalists among the Kanuri and other peoples of northeast Nigeria.One of the most famous such fundamentalists was Mohammed Marwa, also known as Maitatsine, who was at the height of his notoriety during the 1970s and 1980s. He was sent into exile by the Nigerian authorities, he refused to believe Muhammad was the Prophet and instigated riots in the country which resulted in the deaths of thousands of people. Some analysts view Boko Haram as an extension of the Maitatsine riots.[57]
Origin
In 1995, the group was said to be operating under the name Shabaab, Muslim Youth Organisation with Mallam Lawal as the leader. When Lawal left to continue his education, Mohammed Yusuf took over leadership of the group. Yusuf’s leadership allegedly opened the group to political influence and popularity.[58]Yusuf officially founded the group in 2002 in the city of Maiduguri with the aim of establishing a Shari'a government in Borno State under then-Senator Ali Modu Sheriff.[57] He established a religious complex that included a mosque and a school where many poor families from across Nigeria and from neighbouring countries enrolled their children.[38]
The centre had ulterior political goals and soon it was also working as a recruiting ground for future jihadis to fight the state.[38] The group includes members who come from neighbouring Chad and Niger and speak only Arabic.[59]
In 2004 the complex was relocated to Yusuf's home state of Yobe in the village Kanamma near the Niger border.[46]
Human Rights Watch researcher Eric Guttschuss told IRIN News that Yusuf successfully attracted followers from unemployed youth "by speaking out against police and political corruption." Abdulkarim Mohammed, a researcher on Boko Haram, added that violent uprisings in Nigeria are ultimately due to "the fallout of frustration with corruption and the attendant social malaise of poverty and unemployment."[60] Chris Kwaja, a Nigerian university lecturer and researcher, asserts that “religious dimensions of the conflict have been misconstrued as the primary driver of violence when, in fact, disenfranchisement and inequality are the root causes”. Nigeria, he points out, has laws giving regional political leaders the power to qualify people as 'indigenes' (original inhabitants) or not. It determines whether citizens can participate in politics, own land, obtain a job, or attend school. The system is abused widely to ensure political support and to exclude others. Muslims have been denied indigene-ship certificates disproportionately often.[61] Nigerian opposition leader Buba Galadima says: "What is really a group engaged in class warfare is being portrayed in government propaganda as terrorists in order to win counter-terrorism assistance from the West."[62]
Beginning of violence
Timeline of incidents | |
---|---|
7 September 2010 | Bauchi prison break[63] |
31 December 2010 | December 2010 Abuja attack[64] |
12 March 2011 | Assassinated Muslim Cleric Imam Ibrahim Ahmed Abdullahi for criticizing the violent groups in northeast Nigeria[44] |
22 April 2011 | Boko Haram frees 14 prisoners during a jailbreak in Yola, Adamawa State[65] |
29 May 2011 | May 2011 northern Nigeria bombings[66] |
16 June 2011 | The group claims responsibility for the 2011 Abuja police headquarters bombing[67][68] |
26 June 2011 | Bombing attack on a beer garden in Maiduguri, leaving 25 dead and 12 injured[69][70] |
10 July 2011 | Bombing at the All Christian Fellowship Church in Suleja, Niger State[71] |
11 July 2011 | The University of Maiduguri temporarily closes down its campus citing security concerns[72] |
12 August 2011 | Prominent Muslim Cleric Liman Bana is shot dead by Boko Haram[43] |
26 August 2011 | 2011 Abuja bombing[73] |
4 November 2011 | 2011 Damaturu attacks[68][74][75] |
25 December 2011 | December 2011 Nigeria bombings[76] |
5–6 January 2012 | January 2012 Nigeria attacks[77] |
20 January 2012 | January 2012 Kano bombings[78][79] |
28 January 2012 | Nigerian army says it killed 11 Boko Haram insurgents[80] |
8 February 2012 | Boko Haram claims responsibility for a suicide bombing at the army headquarters in Kaduna.[81] |
16 February 2012 | Another prison break staged in central Nigeria; 119 prisoners are released, one warden killed.[82] |
8 March 2012 | During a British hostage rescue attempt to free Italian engineer Franco Lamolinara and Briton Christopher McManus, abducted in 2011 by a splinter group Boko Haram, both hostages were killed.[83] |
31 May 2012 | During a Joint Task Force raid on a Boko Haram den, it was reported that 5 sect members and a German hostage were killed.[84] |
3 June 2012 | 15 church-goers were killed and several injured in a church bombing in Bauchi state. Boku Haram claimed responsibility through spokesperson Abu Qaqa.[85] |
17 June 2012 | Suicide bombers strike three churches in Kaduna State. At least 50 people were killed.[86][87] |
17 June 2012 | 130 bodies were found in Plateau State. It is presumed they were killed by Boko Haram members.[88] |
18 September 2012 | Family of four murdered[89] |
18 September 2012 | Murder of six at an outdoor party[89] |
19 September 2012 | Nigerian Military arrest Boko Haram members, reported death of Abu Qaqa[90] |
3 October 2012 | Around 25–46 people were massacred in the town of Mubi in Nigeria during a night-time raid.[91] |
18 March 2013 | 2013 Kano Bus bombing: At least 22 killed and 65 injured, when a suicide car bomb exploded in Kano bus station. |
7 May 2013 | At least 55 killed and 105 inmates freed in coordinated attacks on army barracks, a prison and police post in Bama town.[92] |
6 July 2013 | Yobe State school shooting: 42 people, mostly students, were killed in a school attack in northeast Nigeria.[93] |
29 September 2013 | College of Agriculture in Gujba: 40 students killed.[94] |
14 January 2014 | At least 31 people killed, over 50 people injured by suicide bombing in Maiduguri, Borno State.[95] |
16 February 2014 | Izghe massacre: 106 villagers are killed.[96] |
25 February 2014 | Nigeria school attack: Fury at military over Yobe deaths. At least 29 teenage boys dead at Federal Government College Buni Yadi.[97] |
When the government came into action, several members of the group were arrested in Bauchi, sparking deadly clashes with Nigerian security forces which led to the deaths of an estimated 700 people. During the fighting with the security forces Boko Haram fighters reportedly "used fuel-laden motorcycles" and "bows with poison arrows" to attack a police station.[99] The group's founder and then leader Mohammed Yusuf was killed during this time while in police custody.[100][101][102] After Yusuf's killing, a new leader emerged whose identity was not known at the time.[103]
Reemergence
After the killing of Mohammed Yusuf, the group carried out its first attack in Borno in January 2011. It resulted in the killing of four people.[104] Since then, the violence has only escalated in terms of both frequency and intensity.In January 2012, Abubakar Shekau, a former deputy to Yusuf, appeared in a video posted on YouTube. According to Reuters, Shekau took control of the group after Yusuf's death in 2009.[105] Authorities had previously believed that Shekau died during the violence in 2009.[106]
State counter-offensive
According to Human Rights Watch, during the period between 2009 and beginning of 2012, Boko Haram was responsible for over 900 deaths.[107]On 14 May 2013, President Goodluck Jonathan declared a state of emergency in the states of Borno, Yobe, and Adamawa in a bid to fight the activities of Boko Haram. He ordered the Nigerian Armed Forces to the three areas around Lake Chad.[108] As of 17 May, Nigerian armed forces' shelling in Borno resulted in at least 21 deaths.[109] A curfew was imposed in Maiduguri as the military used air strikes and shellings to target Boko Haram strongholds.[110] The Nigerian state imposed a blockade on the group's traditional base of Maiduguri in Borno in order to re-establish Nigeria's "territorial integrity."[111]
On 21 May, the Defence Ministry issued a statement that read it had "secured the environs of New Marte, Hausari, Krenoa, Wulgo and Chikun Ngulalo after destroying all the terrorists' camps." Armed Forces Spokesman in Borno Lieutenant Colonel Sagir Musa said that the curfew that had been imposed was not relaxed with the curfew timings being 18:00 to 7:00, however there was minimal traffic in Maiduguri.[112]
On 29 May, Boko Haram's leader Abubakar Shekau, following military claims that the group had been halted,[113] released a video in which he said the group had not lost to the Nigerian armed forces. In the video he showed charred military vehicles and bodies dressed in military fatigues. While he called on Muslims from Iraq, Pakistan, Afghanistan and Syria to join his jihad, he said in Arabic and Hausa:[114]
My fellow brethren from all over the world I assure you that we are strong, hale and hearty since they launched this assault on us following the state of emergency declaration. When they launch any attack on us you see soldiers fleeing and throwing away their weapons like a rabbit that is been hunted down.On the same day, Nigeria's Director of Defence Information Brigadier-General Chris Olukolade said that Shekau's unnamed deputy was found dead near Lake Chad and that two others from Boko Haram were arrested in the area. However, the military's claims were not verified.[115]
Videos were later released showing the alleged bodies of Boko Haram fighters and civilians, including women and children, that died as a result of the military's fighting.[116][citation needed] The people of Maiduguri were unhappy with the declaration of war on the group and instead said the issues of poverty and inequality needed to be tackled first.[117]
It was announced that Shekau was shot in a firefight on 30 June in the Sambisa forest. Nigeria's military said that he likely died between 25 July and 3 August after being secretly taken to Cameroon to receive treatment. He had been described as "the most dreaded and wanted" Boko Haram leader and the United States had recently offered a US$7m bounty for information leading to his arrest.[118]
Assessment
Nigeria's former National Security Adviser, General Owoye Andrew Azazi, has been working with other African governments, European and Middle Eastern governments, and the U.S. government to build cooperation against Boko Haram. He met in 2010 with CIA Director Leon Panetta, and in 2011 with AFRICOM Commander General Ham,[who?] and other U.S. officials, and was in the United States when the congressional panel was preparing its report on Boko Haram. He participated in a CIA conference at about the same time.[120] After the Christmas 2011 bombings carried out by Boko Haram, U.S. President Barack Obama's office issued a statement that confirmed that the U.S. and Nigeria were cooperating against the terrorist group.[121]Strategy and recruiting
In March 2012, it was reported that Boko Haram had taken a strategy to simulate convoys of high-profile Nigerians to access target buildings that are secured with fortifications. Boko Haram has also reportedly attacked Christian worship centres to "trigger reprisal in all parts of the country", distracting authorities so they can unleash attacks elsewhere.The group is also known for using motorcycles as a vehicle to assassinating government officials and security officers. This has led to motorcycle bans in the city of Maiduguri.[119]
It was gathered that the group uses the Internet to propagate its activities and enhance its radicalisation and circulation of extremist ideologies. Boko Haram is reportedly planning to greatly increase its following in many states. Talk of Naija reported that Boko Haram has been involved in a recruitment drive, and they are allegedly targeting Muslims between ages of 17 and 30, and have also been recruiting freed prisoners through prison breaks. The group is also known to assign non-Kanuris on suicide missions.[58]
Funding
Funding sources for Boka Haram are not certain.[24][26] In the past, Nigerian officials have been criticised for being unable to trace much of the funding that Boko Haram has received.[122]It is believed to be partially funded by bank robberies.[16]
It is also believed to be funded by other Islamist groups. In February 2012, recently arrested officials revealed that "while the organisation initially relied on donations from members, its links with Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, AQIM, opened it up to more funding from groups in Saudi Arabia and the UK". They went on to say that other sources of funding included the Al Muntada Trust Fund and the Islamic World Society.[123]
The group also extorts local governments for so-called "protection money". A spokesman of Boko Haram claimed that Kano state governor Ibrahim Shekarau and Bauchi state governor Isa Yuguda had paid them monthly.[124][125]
Since Boko Haram is recognised by the U.S.
Nigerian crime wave sweeps through Britain
The intelligence agencies MI6 and MI5 are being used to clamp down on
fraud and drug-dealing by West African gangs. Jason Bennetto, Crime
Correspondent, investigates a trend costing Britain billions of pounds a
year.
The criminals, mainly Nigerians, have been discovered working inside
government departments, the police and tax offices. The level of crime
is so serious that the National Criminal Intelligence Service will
tomorrow announce an expansion of its work against the gangs.
Agents and eavesdropping equipment from MI5, MI6 and the listening base at the Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ) in Cheltenham are being used to investigate Nigerian crime. The cost of the fraud alone is pounds 3.5bn a year, says the NCIS.
The fraudsters concentrate on con-tricks and benefit fraud, drug-trafficking, mainly cocaine, and illegal immigration. The intelligence agencies are assisting NCIS and British forces in some of the most serious cases. The secret services can provide expertise in infiltrating the gangs, bugging, covert surveillance and identifying targets.
The gangs, which have strongholds in the US and most European countries, form networks to siphon money and have proved difficult to break into. Activities by West African criminals that have been detected include:
At the Treasury Solicitor's office, the Government's lawyers, a worker was using the fax to work a scam involving advance fees. She was admonished and sacked.
An employee at the Department of Social Security was creating false National Insurance numbers and identifications which were being used to claim benefits such as education grants and child allowance. One individual was found with 100 separate identities.
A worker at one of the Inland Revenue's accounts offices was caught photocopying incoming company tax returns, cheques, and headed notepaper. These were sold to a contact who wrote to the banks and set up standing orders for small amounts to be paid into their accounts every month.
The Metropolitan Police had a problem with cleaners found looking for data and addresses in a West End police station.
An estimated 500,000 "advance-fee fraud" or "419" letters attempting to con people by promising risk-free cash are sent by West Africans, mainly from Lagos, around the world every year. The "419" scam is named after the section of the Nigerian penal code dealing with fraud. Thousands of individuals and companies in Britain are randomly written to and asked if they will help transfer millions of pounds of government money out of Nigeria in return for a cut of the cash.
All they supposedly have to do is provide bank details. But once hooked they are asked for an "advance" or have money removed from their accounts. Millions are stolen this way every year. Needless to say, the government money never existed.
Law enforcers have found it particularly difficult to crack Nigerian crime rings because they have a complicated language which hard to translate and infiltrate. The Nigerian criminals are good networkers and operate in loose-knit organisations. There are big Nigerian crime rings in Poland, Russia and Bangkok.
An NCIS spokesman confirmed that Nigerian fraudsters had been found working "from the Government to the private sector. They are not just trying to get money, they also want letterheads which can be used for further frauds."
A police source said that you can always tell if a law enforcer is dealing with organised Nigerian crime because "they have a broken marriage, a drink problem, and the largest card index in the office." A small number of the criminals also come from Ghana.
The NCIS, backed by law enforcers from the G8 group of countries, are to launch new anti-crime initiatives aimed at organised West African offenders. Detective Superintendent Bryan Drew, head of the NCIS's Strategic and Specialist Intelligence Branch, said: "West African organised crime is now in the big league - we recognise they now pose a significant threat." Commenting on contributions by the secret services, he said: "The UK intelligence agencies provide support and information that we could not get from anywhere else. They each have specialist skills which can be extremely useful in our investigations."
Another intelligence officer said: "It's by far the most insidious crime problem the UK has got."
Agents and eavesdropping equipment from MI5, MI6 and the listening base at the Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ) in Cheltenham are being used to investigate Nigerian crime. The cost of the fraud alone is pounds 3.5bn a year, says the NCIS.
The fraudsters concentrate on con-tricks and benefit fraud, drug-trafficking, mainly cocaine, and illegal immigration. The intelligence agencies are assisting NCIS and British forces in some of the most serious cases. The secret services can provide expertise in infiltrating the gangs, bugging, covert surveillance and identifying targets.
The gangs, which have strongholds in the US and most European countries, form networks to siphon money and have proved difficult to break into. Activities by West African criminals that have been detected include:
At the Treasury Solicitor's office, the Government's lawyers, a worker was using the fax to work a scam involving advance fees. She was admonished and sacked.
An employee at the Department of Social Security was creating false National Insurance numbers and identifications which were being used to claim benefits such as education grants and child allowance. One individual was found with 100 separate identities.
A worker at one of the Inland Revenue's accounts offices was caught photocopying incoming company tax returns, cheques, and headed notepaper. These were sold to a contact who wrote to the banks and set up standing orders for small amounts to be paid into their accounts every month.
The Metropolitan Police had a problem with cleaners found looking for data and addresses in a West End police station.
An estimated 500,000 "advance-fee fraud" or "419" letters attempting to con people by promising risk-free cash are sent by West Africans, mainly from Lagos, around the world every year. The "419" scam is named after the section of the Nigerian penal code dealing with fraud. Thousands of individuals and companies in Britain are randomly written to and asked if they will help transfer millions of pounds of government money out of Nigeria in return for a cut of the cash.
All they supposedly have to do is provide bank details. But once hooked they are asked for an "advance" or have money removed from their accounts. Millions are stolen this way every year. Needless to say, the government money never existed.
Law enforcers have found it particularly difficult to crack Nigerian crime rings because they have a complicated language which hard to translate and infiltrate. The Nigerian criminals are good networkers and operate in loose-knit organisations. There are big Nigerian crime rings in Poland, Russia and Bangkok.
An NCIS spokesman confirmed that Nigerian fraudsters had been found working "from the Government to the private sector. They are not just trying to get money, they also want letterheads which can be used for further frauds."
A police source said that you can always tell if a law enforcer is dealing with organised Nigerian crime because "they have a broken marriage, a drink problem, and the largest card index in the office." A small number of the criminals also come from Ghana.
The NCIS, backed by law enforcers from the G8 group of countries, are to launch new anti-crime initiatives aimed at organised West African offenders. Detective Superintendent Bryan Drew, head of the NCIS's Strategic and Specialist Intelligence Branch, said: "West African organised crime is now in the big league - we recognise they now pose a significant threat." Commenting on contributions by the secret services, he said: "The UK intelligence agencies provide support and information that we could not get from anywhere else. They each have specialist skills which can be extremely useful in our investigations."
Another intelligence officer said: "It's by far the most insidious crime problem the UK has got."
Nigerian organized crime
Nigerian organized crime, or Nigerian OC, may refer to a number of fraudsters, drug traffickers and racketeers of various sorts originating from Nigeria. Nigerian criminal gangs rose to prominence in the 1980s, owing much to the globalization of the world's economies and the high level of lawlessness already in the country.
Criminal organizations from Nigeria typically do not follow the mafia-type
model followed by other groups. They appear to be less formal and more
organized along familial and ethnic lines, thus making them less
susceptible by infiltration from law enforcement. Police investigations
are further hampered by the fact there are at least 250 distinct ethnic languages in Nigeria. Other criminal gangs from Nigeria appear to be smaller-scale freelance operations.[1] Most Nigerian organized crime syndicates are of Igbo or Yoruba origin. Especially groups from Benin City are notorious for human trafficking.
An example of this are the highly organized confraternities/campus cults that operate worldwide, for example the Neo Black Movement of Africa. In its own words, the Neo Black Movement of Africa is a "registered non-partisan, non-religious and non- tribal organisation that sincerely seek to revive, retain and modify where necessary those aspects of African culture that would provide vehicles of progress for Africa and her peoples."
The current worldwide head of the Neo Black Movement is Augustus Bemigho-Oyeoyibo. A representative of the Neo Black Movement of Africa has claimed to be separate from the Black Axe groups and has engaged in charitable giving.
Behind the welfare facade of the Neo Black Movement hides indeed the most dreaded Nigerian campus cult, the Black Axe confraternity. NBM usually state that they are not identical with Black Axe for propaganda purposes. While the atrocities committed by campus cult members are well-known, very little is known about other activities of the Neo Black Movement. Offiong claims that the group's initial goal of promoting black consciousness and fighting for the dignity of Africans and their freedom from neo-colonialism has deteriorated into self-serving behaviour that is "notoriously and brutally violent" (Offiong 2003, 69-70). He maintains that violence has in fact become the cult's official policy (ibid., 70).
Apart from the atrocities in the orbit of NBM, most members of the confraternity are involved in fraud and cyber crime. The main reason to join the confraternity is (besides the pressure and intimidation that is applied to students to join) the fact that the confraternity has infiltrated all spheres of Nigerian society and serves the main purpose of helping its members climb the career ladder and going unpunished for their crimes by means of their nepotistic structure. Investigations and a number of arrests of members of NBM by the Italian police brought to light various crimes committed by members of NBM. NBM and other cults were found guilty of smuggling of drugs, extortion, 419 fraud, prostitution, passport falsification, and cloning of credit cards.
In 2011, eight more members of NBM were arrested in Italy for the same offenses mentioned above. They are referred to as an international criminal organisation and Nigerian Mafia. According to internal documents, the confraternity helps members to immigrate illegally to Europe. Nigerian fraud rings have been exported to Europe, America, and Asia (see external links below).
In the United States, Nigerian drug traffickers are important distributors of heroin, from importing it into the country to distribution level and selling it to lower-lever street gangs.[3] These criminal groups are also known to launder drug money through domestic football clubs in the Nigeria Premier League, and are rumored to make additional money through match fixing activity within football matches
An example of this are the highly organized confraternities/campus cults that operate worldwide, for example the Neo Black Movement of Africa. In its own words, the Neo Black Movement of Africa is a "registered non-partisan, non-religious and non- tribal organisation that sincerely seek to revive, retain and modify where necessary those aspects of African culture that would provide vehicles of progress for Africa and her peoples."
The current worldwide head of the Neo Black Movement is Augustus Bemigho-Oyeoyibo. A representative of the Neo Black Movement of Africa has claimed to be separate from the Black Axe groups and has engaged in charitable giving.
Behind the welfare facade of the Neo Black Movement hides indeed the most dreaded Nigerian campus cult, the Black Axe confraternity. NBM usually state that they are not identical with Black Axe for propaganda purposes. While the atrocities committed by campus cult members are well-known, very little is known about other activities of the Neo Black Movement. Offiong claims that the group's initial goal of promoting black consciousness and fighting for the dignity of Africans and their freedom from neo-colonialism has deteriorated into self-serving behaviour that is "notoriously and brutally violent" (Offiong 2003, 69-70). He maintains that violence has in fact become the cult's official policy (ibid., 70).
Apart from the atrocities in the orbit of NBM, most members of the confraternity are involved in fraud and cyber crime. The main reason to join the confraternity is (besides the pressure and intimidation that is applied to students to join) the fact that the confraternity has infiltrated all spheres of Nigerian society and serves the main purpose of helping its members climb the career ladder and going unpunished for their crimes by means of their nepotistic structure. Investigations and a number of arrests of members of NBM by the Italian police brought to light various crimes committed by members of NBM. NBM and other cults were found guilty of smuggling of drugs, extortion, 419 fraud, prostitution, passport falsification, and cloning of credit cards.
In 2011, eight more members of NBM were arrested in Italy for the same offenses mentioned above. They are referred to as an international criminal organisation and Nigerian Mafia. According to internal documents, the confraternity helps members to immigrate illegally to Europe. Nigerian fraud rings have been exported to Europe, America, and Asia (see external links below).
Activities
Drug trafficking
Nigerian criminal groups are heavily involved in drug trafficking, shipping heroin from Asian countries to Europe and America; and cocaine from South America to Europe and South Africa. The large numbers of ethnic Nigerians in India, Pakistan, and Thailand give their gangs ready access to around 90% of the world's heroin.[2]In the United States, Nigerian drug traffickers are important distributors of heroin, from importing it into the country to distribution level and selling it to lower-lever street gangs.[3] These criminal groups are also known to launder drug money through domestic football clubs in the Nigeria Premier League, and are rumored to make additional money through match fixing activity within football matches
naija news
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-- Connect Hearing, the Australian network of hearing …

Feb 11, 2014 - 10:45 GMT
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Events & Conferences
Surging production in the Utica and Marcellus
plays have unlocked major opportunities for E&P and midstream
companies operating in both dry and liquid rich fields, feeding the
hungry utility and petrochemical demand markets. Given the influx in …

Feb 28, 2014 - 22:42 GMT
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EIN Presswire
CHICAGO, IL, USA, February 28, 2014
/EINPresswire.com/ -- Every Market Media bucketed responses from 166
campaigns and 1.4 million delivered records in sixteen offer categories.
Average open rate was 3.11%, with particularly strong performances by …

Dec 30, 2013 - 10:53 GMT
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Events & Conferences
2014 China (Guangzhou) International Tent Show
Date:May 12th-14th, 2014
Venue: China Import & Export Fair Pazhou Complex (Area B)
China should be the focus in tent industry
China is the world’s largest tent manufacturer and exporter …

Feb 28, 2014 - 21:45 GMT
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EIN Presswire
An extensive new iPhone App hits the iTunes App
Store March 1st to coincide with celebration of Fredyryk Chopin's
birthday.
LUTZ, FLORIDA, UNITED STATES, February 28, 2014
/EINPresswire.com/ -- Adding to the growing portfolio of resources
developed …

Nov 11, 2013 - 10:48 GMT
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Events & Conferences
Omics Publishing Group takes Immense pleasure in
announcing the commencement of our "2nd International Conference on
Epidemiology and Evolutionary Genetics” from August 18-19, 2014 in
Beijing, China.
Taking account of the current scenario in …

Feb 28, 2014 - 21:43 GMT
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EIN Presswire
Google Apps Reseller Wins 2014 Channel Partners
360 Award for Unique Approach to Cloud Unified Communications.
LAS VEGAS, NV, USA, February 28, 2014
/EINPresswire.com/ -- Impact GRC, an Authorized Google Apps Reseller who
partners with gUnify, Hosted …

Sep 26, 2013 - 10:20 GMT
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Events & Conferences
The European Biomass Conference and Exhibition (EU
BC&E) ranks as one of the top world leading events in the Biomass
sector, combining a highly respected international Conference with an
Industrial Exhibition.
It highlights progress in research, …

Feb 28, 2014 - 21:43 GMT
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EIN Presswire
DENVER, CO, USA, February 28, 2014
/EINPresswire.com/ -- Users of BizVotes.com have ranked Botha
Chiropractic as the Best Chiropractor in Denver for the third year in a
row. The Spinal Connection specialists are currently offering a New
Patient Special …

Sep 2, 2013 - 10:08 GMT
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Events & Conferences
The 2nd edition of Future Bank Asia expo and
conference is where the region’s banks come to create and reshape the
future of retail banking operations. Co-located with 7 other events,
international exhibitors will be showcasing the latest technologies at …

Feb 28, 2014 - 21:43 GMT
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EIN Presswire
SAN DIEGO, CA, USA, February 28, 2014
/EINPresswire.com/ -- Respected Japanese massage specialists named Best
Massage in San Diego for the fifth year in a row by the users of Biz
Votes. The company invites anyone in need of massage in North Park to
stop …

Feb 28, 2014 - 21:43 GMT
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EIN Presswire
The Daon solution will help prevent terrorism,
illegal immigration and other crimes at the border.
FAIRFAX, VA, USA, February 28, 2014
/EINPresswire.com/ -- Daon, a leading provider of identity assurance andAvailable As Downloadable eBook
Feb 28, 2014 - 20:23 GMT
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EIN Presswire
First home buyers in Perth will learn how to best
leverage their budget and available government programs like the FHOG in
WA to purchase their dream home.
WEST PERTH, WA, AUSTRALIA, February 28, 2014
/EINPresswire.com/ -- First home buyers in Perth have …
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