Nigerian terror group Boko Haram designates US as a terror target

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Boko Haram extremist
A Boko Haram extremist.
Boko Haram extremist
A Boko Haram extremist.

THE leader of the Nigerian jihadist group Boko Haram – which the State Department so far has refused to designate as a foreign terrorist organization – boasted Monday that it was now strong enough to “comfortably confront” the United States.

Boko Haram is not only fighting the cause of Islam in Nigeria, Abubakar Shekau said in a video message, but also against the leaders of the U.S., France and all other countries that do not rule according to the teachings of the Qur’an, the Lagos Guardian daily reported.

Shekau also claimed responsibility for a spate of recent deadly attacks, threatened more, and said his group’s firepower now exceeded that of the Nigerian military.

Premium Times, an Abuja-based media group, translated other portions of his message from the local Hausa language.

“Let the world know that we have been enjoined by Allah to kill the unbelievers,” Shekau said. “We shall continue to kill those who strive to stand against the will of Allah by opposing shari’a. We don’t mind if we die doing this because it is even a blessing for us to die in this cause and gain paradise.”

Since 2009 Boko Haram (the name roughly translates “Western education is prohibited”) has developed from an obscure sect to a group responsible for the deaths of thousands of Christians and others, and with global jihadist pretentions.

On Sunday its gunmen attacked a mosque in northern Borno state, killing 44 people, and killed at least another 12 people in a nearby village, officials reported. Christians have borne the brunt of its violent campaign, which also included an Aug. 2011 suicide bombing at the United Nations headquarters in Abuja that killed 25 people.

Senior U.S. military officers have for several years been voicing concerns about Boko Haram’s collaboration with al-Qaeda affiliates in Africa including al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) and al-Shabaab.

“We have seen indications of a sharing of financing,” then-U.S. Africa Command commander Gen. Carter Ham told the House Armed Services Committee last March, saying he was “very worried” about the situation.

“Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb is, we believe, al-Qaeda’s best funded, wealthiest affiliate, if you will, mostly from kidnapping for ransom, but also through drug trade. And we believe they have provided financing directly to Boko Haram,” he said. “We believe that they have shared training, to include explosives training, and we believe that fighters from Nigeria, Boko Haram-sponsored fighters, have found their way over the past year to training camps in northern Mali.”

Ham said he believed some elements in Boko Haram would like to broaden the target beyond Nigeria, “to include not just in Africa, but Europe and aspirationally to the United States.”

“That’s why it’s important for us, in partnership with Nigeria and others, to help them counter this before their capability matches their intent.”

Boko Haram’s violent activities are the subject of an investigation by International Criminal Court prosecutors, who in a report this month cited evidence that the group is responsible for crimes against humanity and persecution, particularly targeting Nigerian Christians.

“In the past two years, Boko Haram has shown signs of transitioning into a globalized Salafi-jihadi group and has attracted international attention in particular by launching suicide attacks,” the report said.

The Nigerian government last May declared a state of emergency in northern areas affected by the violence and in June outlawed Boko Haram under legislation that provides for a minimum of 20 years’ imprisonment for anyone who supports a listed group.

The British government last month proscribed Boko Haram, saying the move aimed to prevent it from operating in the U.K. and to block British-based support for the group.

Yet despite those developments, initiatives in the U.S. House and Senate, and appeals by Nigerian Christians, the State Department continues to delay making a decision on designating Boko Haram as a foreign terrorist organization (FTO), a move that can entail the deportation of members, denial of U.S. visas, prosecution of those in the U.S. who provide funds, and the blocking of assets.

In June last year the administration did list Shekau and two other individuals in the group as “specially designated global terrorists” under an executive order, although critics in Congress said the move did not go far enough.

‘Deeply concerned’

In response to queries, a State Department spokesperson said Tuesday that that U.S. “remains deeply concerned” about the Boko Haram threat and was “working closely with the Nigerian government to address the growing threat of violent extremism.”

“We are committed to taking any and all steps toward countering Boko Haram as long as we believe such steps will be effective in advancing U.S. interests and objectives.”  CNS News

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