The dreaded islamic sect, Boko Haram have a new leader who promises to end attacks on mosques and markets
used by Muslims, according to an interview published Wednesday by the Islamic
State group.
The group’s al-Nabaa newspaper
identified Abu Musab al-Barnawi as the new “Wali” of its West Africa Province,
a title previously used to describe long-time leader Abubakar Shekau.
The report did not say what
Shekau’s current status is.
The interview with al-Barnawi
indicates a major change in strategy for the Nigerian extremists, who have
attacked mosques with suicide bombers and gunmen, blown up suicide bombers in
crowded marketplaces and killed and kidnapped school children.
The targeting of
students accounts for its nickname Boko Haram, which means Western education is
sinful or forbidden.
Wednesday’s announcement
indicates a coup by Boko Haram breakaway group Ansaru against Shekau, and
follows a trend of extremist Islamic groups moving away from al-Qaida to the
Islamic State, analyst Jacob Zenn said.
Ansaru broke away from Boko Haram
because it disagrees with the indiscriminate killing of civilians, especially
Muslims.
Al-Barnawi is the pseudonym of a
Nigerian journalist allied with Ansaru, which is known for kidnapping
foreigners, according to Zenn.
Shekau in March 2015 declared
that Boko Haram had become the Islamic State’s West Africa Province. At the
time, Boko Haram was the most powerful military force in northeast Nigeria,
controlling a huge area and better equipped and motivated than Nigerian forces.
Under Shekau, the seven-year
insurgency spread to neighboring countries, killed more than 20,000 people and
driven more than 2.2 millon from their homes, creating what aid workers have
called a catastrophic humanitarian emergency.
Since last year, Nigeria has a
new leader, President Muhammadu Buhari, a former military dictator who has
better armed and motivated security forces. He is also fighting corruption that
diverted some $2.1 billion that was meant to buy weapons to fight the Islamic
uprising, and is cooperating with a multinational force that has the extremists
on the run.
In the interview, al-Barnawi said
that under his leadership the militants will work to seize back territory. He
claimed that increasing numbers of youth are joining the cause, though
Nigeria’s military reports that hundreds of its fighters have surrendered as
aerial bombardments and ground assaults cut supply routes.
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