Boko Haram’s shadowy leader Abubakar Shekau has vowed not to relent in his fight against “Nigeria and the whole world”.
In a video released on Sunday, Shekau said: “I… Abubakar Ash-Shakawy
(Shekau), the leader of Jama’atu Ahlissunnah Lidda’awati Wal Jihad, made
it a duty for myself (to fight) Nigeria and the whole world”.
Last week, Shekau said in an audio message he was still head of the
group despite his purported replacement by Sheikh Abu Musab al-Barnawi, a
former Boko Haram spokesman.
“We have no desire to fight our Muslim brethren,” Shekau, who last appeared in March, said in the 24-minute video.
Shekau ridiculed suggestions that he was dead, and looked more composed and energetic than in previous appearances.
“I’m alive by the permission of Allah,” he said in his speech in
Arabic and Hausa, adding that he would only die when his time came.
In the video he is wearing camouflage gear and holding a machine gun,
standing between two Islamist fighters in balaclavas armed with
rocket-propelled grenade launchers.
He taunted President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration and condemned
Western countries including the United States, France, Germany and “the
tyrants of the United Nonsense (UN)”.
At the end of his speech – apparently filmed in Boko Haram’s
stronghold in the Sambisa forest of northeastern Nigeria – he fired off
rounds of ammunition into the air.
His absence in recent months had sparked speculation about his fate and whether he had been deposed as Boko Haram’s chief.
Barnawi’s appointment was contained in a magazine issued by the
Islamic State group, to which Boko Haram pledged allegiance in March
last year.
Shekau dismissed Barnawi as an infidel who condoned living in an un-Islamic society without waging jihad.
Shekau became leader after Nigerian security forces killed the group’s founding chief Mohammed Yusuf in 2009.
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