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Boko Haram spokesman threatens
Christians, troops AFP
January 2, 2012

FILE PIX OF LATE BOKO HARAM LEADER:YUSUF
MAIDUGURI (AFP) – A purported spokesman for
Islamist group, Boko Haram, has issued an ultimatum to
Christians in the country’s north and threatened to confront
troops after the president declared a state of emergency in hard
hit areas.
Abul Qaqa, who has spoken on behalf of the
group blamed for scores of attacks in numerous times in the
past, said he was giving southerners living in the north a
three-day ultimatum to leave.
“We find it pertinent to state that
soldiers will only kill innocent Muslims in the local government
areas where the state of emergency was declared,” he told
journalists in a phone conference late Sunday.
“We would confront them squarely to protect
our brothers.”
Speaking in the Hausa language common
throughout the north, Qaqa said “we also wish to call on our
fellow Muslims to come back to the north because we have
evidence that they would be attacked.
“We are also giving a three-day ultimatum
to the southerners living in the northern part of Nigeria to
move away.”
Boko Haram is believed to include different
factions with varying aims, its structure remains unclear and
other people have claimed to speak on its behalf.
Nigeria’s 160 million population is roughly
divided between a mainly Muslim north and predominately
Christian south.
Muslims have been victims of Boko Haram
attacks, but a wave of Christmas day bombings particularly
targeting churches set off fears of retaliation from Christians.
President Goodluck Jonathan declared a
state of emergency on Saturday in parts of four states hard hit
by violence blamed on Boko Haram.
The declaration came in response to scores
of attacks attributed to Boko Haram, particularly the bombings
on Christmas that killed 49 people, most of them in a gruesome
blast at a Catholic church as services were ending.
Qaqa also criticised Jonathan over his
visit to a Catholic church outside Abuja on Saturday. The church
was the site of the bloodiest Christmas day attack, with an
explosion killing 44 people there as services were ending.
“The President had never visited any of the
theatres were Muslims were massacred,” he said, naming areas
where scores of Muslims were killed in post-election riots in
April.
While Boko Haram has been carrying out
increasingly deadly attacks for months, including an August
suicide bombing of UN headquarters in Abuja that left 25 dead,
the Christmas violence sparked intense fear and outrage.
It also led to warnings from Christian
leaders that they would defend themselves if such attacks
continued, raising deep concern.
While declaring the state of emergency in
Africa’s largest oil producer, Jonathan acknowledged that the
attacks “have threatened our collective security and shaken the
foundations of our corporate existence as a nation.”
It was declared in parts of the states of
Borno, where Boko Haram has traditionally had its base, Niger,
Plateau and Yobe.
In the northeastern city of Maiduguri, the
capital of Borno state, residents reported increased patrols on
Monday. Soldiers had been entering homes in search of weapons
and bombs, they said.
After the searches, soldiers told residents
to report any unusual behaviour or abandoned vehicles which may
contain planted bombs
This AFP report was culled fro vanguardngr.com
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