Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau vowed to disrupt Nigeria’s upcoming
general elections in a new video released Tuesday, after two suicide
attacks in the northeast blamed on the Islamists killed 38 people.
“This election will not be held even if we are dead. Even if we are
not alive Allah will never allow you to do it,” Shekau said in the Hausa
language, presumably referring to the polls scheduled for March 28.
The video appeared to be the first message released by the group on
Twitter, a sign of its changing media tactics after previous messages
were distributed to journalists on DVD.
Shekau was shown in unusual clarity in front of a solid blue
background, dressed in black and with an automatic weapon resting to his
right.
Nigeria’s general election had been scheduled for February 14 but was
postponed by six weeks, with the security services saying they needed
more time to contain the violence in the northeast, Boko Haram’s
stronghold.
Despite Shekau’s threat, experts doubt that the Islamist rebels have
the capacity to disrupt voting nationwide, although election officials
have conceded that voting could prove impossible in parts of the
northeast, especially by March 28, the new election day.
But the latest wave of attacks blamed on the rebels underscored the
challenge facing Nigeria and its neighbours — Cameroon, Chad and Niger —
despite claims of successes in the joint operation launched this month.
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