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NEWS and REPORTS => World News => Topic started by: HuffingtonPost on Nov 01, 2014, 05:31 PM

Title: #News: Boko Haram: Kidnapped Girls Have Been Married Off, Truce Never Happened
Post by: HuffingtonPost on Nov 01, 2014, 05:31 PM


By Isaac Abrak                

ABUJA, Nov 1 (Reuters) - A man claiming to be Boko Haram  leader Abubakar Shekau said more than 200 girls kidnapped by the  group six months ago had been "married off" to its fighters,  contradicting Nigerian government claims they would soon be  freed.                

Nigeria's military says it killed Shekau a year ago, and  authorities said in September that they had also killed an  imposter posting as him in videos. In the latest recording it is  hard to see the man's face as he his filmed from a distance.                

But it is likely to raise grave doubts about whether talks  between a Boko Haram faction and the government in neighboring  Chad will secure the release of the girls, who were kidnapped  from a secondary school in Chibok, northeast Nigeria, in April.                

"We have have married them off and they are all in their  husbands' houses," the man claiming to be Shekau says.                

"The over 200 Chibok girls have converted to Islam, which  they confess is the best religion. Either their parents accept  this and convert too or they can die."                

The majority of the kidnapped girls were Christians.                

The man in the video also denied there was a ceasefire, and  denounced Ahmadu, who says he represents Boko Haram in Chad.                

"Who says we are dialoguing or discussing with anybody? Are  you talking to yourselves? We don't know anybody by the name of  Danladi. If we meet him now we will cut off his head," the man  in the video says.                

"All we are doing is slaughtering people with machetes and  shooting people with guns ... War is what we want."                

He says also that they are holding a "white man." The only  known hostage seized in the northeast is a German teacher  kidnapped from a college in the northeastern city of Gombe in  July by gunmen widely assumed to be linked to Boko Haram.                

Shekau's denial of the ceasefire appears supported by the  violence since the government announced it two weeks ago. It  also raises doubts about the actual influence of Ahmadu.                

The five-year-old campaign for an Islamic state by Boko  Haram, which has killed thousands and whose name means "Western  education is sinful," has become by far the biggest menace to  the security of Africa's biggest economy and top oil producer.                

Its fighters have attacked targets almost every day for  weeks and last week seized control of Mubi, the home town of  Nigeria's defense chief Air Chief Marshal Alex Badeh.   It was Badeh who announced the ceasefire.                

They robbed banks, burned down houses and hoisted their  black flag over the Emir's palace, killing dozens of people and  forcing thousands to flee, witnesses in Mubi said.                

A car bomb thought to have been planted by Boko Haram killed  at least 10 people at a crowded bus stop in Gombe on Friday  morning, emergency services said.                

The government has blamed the violence on Boko Haram's  allied criminal networks that it cannot control. There are also  thought to be several competing factions within the group.     (Writing by Tim Cocks; Editing by Louise Ireland)
Source: huffingtonPost