Monday, December 30, 2019

IS claims to be behind execution of 11 Christians in Nigeria

IS-affiliated jihadists have released a video that purportedly shows them executing 11 Christians in Nigeria in a brutally violent retaliation attack.
AFP
news.com.auDECEMBER 28, 20198:41AM
Jihadists aligned to the Islamic State group have released a video claiming to show the execution of 11 Christians in restive northeast Nigeria.
The footage posted online late on Thursday by IS-linked propaganda arm Amaq showed 11 blindfolded men being shot and stabbed by jihadists from the Islamic State West African Province (ISWAP) at an undisclosed location.
The video showed men in beige uniforms and black masks lining up behind blindfolded captives then beheading 10 of them and shooting an 11th man.
“This is a message to Christians all over the world,” said a masked man in the one-minute video.
He claimed the killings were in reprisal for the death of IS chief Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi and his spokesman.
The killings were allegedly in reprisal for the death of IS chief Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, who committed suicide in October to avoid capture during a US special forces raid. Picture: AFP
The killings were allegedly in reprisal for the death of IS chief Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, who committed suicide in October to avoid capture during a US special forces raid. Picture: AFPSource:AFP
IS leader Baghdadi committed suicide in October to avoid capture during a US special forces raid on his hide-out in the province of Idlib in northwest Syria.
In recent months, ISWAP has intensified its attacks on Christians, security personnel and aid staff, setting up roadblocks on highways and conducting searches.
The United Nations on Tuesday condemned the “increasing practice by armed groups to set up checkpoints targeting civilians” in the northeast of Nigeria.
On Sunday, the jihadists killed six people and abducted five others including two aid workers when they intercepted vehicles on a highway on the outskirts of Maiduguri, the Borno state capital.
Screengrabs from a video released by the group
Screengrabs from a video released by the groupSource:Supplied
In a similar attack on December 5, ISWAP fighters disguised as Nigerian soldiers stopped and searched vehicles at a checkpoint near Maiduguri.
The group claimed in a statement that six soldiers and eight civilians, including two Red Cross workers, were among those abducted in that attack.
Last week the group released a video showing 11 alleged hostages.
One of the detainees in the video who identified himself as a schoolteacher said all the 11 hostages were Christians and appealed to the Nigerian government to secure their release.
Nigeria’s President Muhammadu Buhari said on Friday he was “saddened and shocked by the death of innocent hostages in the hands of remorseless, godless, callous gangs of mass murderers”.
Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari urged the public not to ‘let the terrorists divide us by turning Christians against Muslims’ because they ‘don’t represent Islam’. Picture: AFP
Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari urged the public not to ‘let the terrorists divide us by turning Christians against Muslims’ because they ‘don’t represent Islam’. Picture: AFPSource:AFP
“We should, under no circumstance, let the terrorists divide us by turning Christians against Muslims because these barbaric killers don’t represent Islam,” he said in a statement.
Buhari pledged to “continue to intensify our efforts towards strengthening international co-operation and collaboration to break the backbone of these evil doers”.
The decade-long jihadist insurgency in northeast Nigeria has killed over 36,000 people and displaced around two million, according to the United Nations.
The violence has spread to neighbouring Niger, Chad and Cameroon, prompting a regional military coalition to fight the militants.
ISWAP pledged allegiance to Baghdadi in 2016 and split from the main insurgent group Boko Haram.
It stepped up attacks on military outposts and troops in mid-2018, but has increasingly begun targeting civilians.
The Nigerian government has repeatedly said that the insurgency is defeated but the jihadists maintain the ability to strike across swathes of territory.

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