Culled from Punch:
IN yet another bizarre occurrence, suspected members of the violent Islamic sect, Boko Haram, have reportedly gunned down 44 people praying in a mosque in Borno State.Agency reports on Monday indicated that the killings occurred on Sunday morning at a mosque in Konduga town, about 35 kilometres outside Maiduguri, the Borno State capital city.A State Security Service agent and a member of a vigilante group working with the military told the Associated Press on Monday that they counted the bodies at the mosque after the attack.A member of the vigilante group, Usman Musa, said four of his colleagues were killed when they responded to calls for help.
The state security agent spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorised to talk to reporters.
Musa and the security service agent said
the attackers wore military camouflage uniforms used by the Nigerian
army, which they might have acquired in one of their attacks on military
bases.
On their way back from Konduga, the
security forces came upon the scene of another attack at Ngom village,
five kilometers outside Maiduguri, where Musa said he counted 12 bodies
of civilians.
Twenty-six worshippers at the mosque
were hospitalised with gunshot wounds, said a security guard at the
emergency ward of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital. He and the state security
agent both spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not
allowed to give information to reporters.
Agency reports also indicated that the
leader of the Boko Haram sect, Ibrahim Shekau, boasted in a video that
his members had killed many soldiers.
In a video received by journalists Monday, Shekau reportedly brushed off any gains asserted by the security forces.
“You soldiers have claimed that you are
powerful, that we have been defeated, that we are mad people,” Shekau
said in the local Hausa language.
He added, “But how can a mad man
successfully coordinate recent attacks in Gamboru, in Malam Fatori,
slaughter people in Biu, kill in Gwoza and in Bama, where soldiers fled
under our heavy fire power?
“We have killed countless soldiers and we are going to kill more. We can now comfortably confront the United States of America.”
On Christmas Day in 2011, Boko Haram
members attacked St. Theresa’s Catholic Church in Madalla, Niger State,
killing at least 43 parishioners.
When our correspondent contacted the
Director of Defence Information, Brig.-Gen Chris Olukolade, he said that
he was not aware of the killings in the Borno mosque.
“I am not aware of this incident. I have
not received any official briefing on this incident you are talking
about,” Olukolade said.
The violent sect has been responsible
for at least 2,000 deaths since 2009 when it began a violent campaign
against the Federal Government and its varied targets have included
churches, mosques, drinking joints, military and police facilities.
Just last week, the terrorists attacked a
barricade mounted by the Joint Military Task Force in Gonori, Yobe
State, killing six soldiers and two policemen.
A state of emergency to curb the sect has been on in Yobe, Borno and Adamawa states since May 14.
Meanwhile, the United States government
has said that it has sent out invitations to some of the 19 governors
in northern Nigeria to deliberate on ending the Boko Haram insurgency.
The US Mission in Nigeria said a senior
delegation from the US State Department expected in the country for the
9th meeting of the US-Nigeria Bi-National Commission, scheduled for
Abuja on August 15, would hold discussions with the governors.
United States Consul-General, Mr.
Jeffrey Hawkins, stated this during a “Roundtable with Opinion Leaders
on the US-Nigeria Bilateral Relationships” in Lagos on Monday.
Hawkins said the rationale behind the
planned meeting was to have the “inputs’’ of the governors as part of
efforts by the White House to collaborate with the Nigerian government
in ending terrorism in the country.
He added that the discussions with the
governors would involve the leader of the American delegation, the
United States Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs, Wendy
Sherman; an Assistant Secretary in the US Department of Defence, high
ranking Deputy Assistant Secretaries of States from the State
Department, and officials from the US-Africa Command among others.
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