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A screen grab from the video posted on YouTube on December 29, 2016 by Islamist group Boko Haram showing leader Abubakar Shekau disputing a claim by Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari that the militant group had been routed from its Sambisa Forest stronghold. Photo: AFP

Boko Haram leader urges fighters to ‘kill, slaughter and abduct’ and ‘detonate bombs everywhere’

Boko Haram’s leader urges his fighters to “kill, slaughter and abduct ... and detonate bombs everywhere,” in a new video that denies Nigerian government claims that his Islamic extremist group has been crushed.

The battle is just beginning
Abubakar Shekau

President Muhammadu Buhari declared last week that soldiers had driven Boko Haram from its last forest enclave in the northeast, boasting “the terrorists are on the run, and no longer have a place to hide.”

In a video posted on YouTube, Abubakar Shekau announces: “I am here, well and alive” and that “the battle is just beginning.”

Nigeria’s military has claimed to have killed Shekau at least three times and earlier this year declared he had been fatally wounded. This week, the army said it seized Shekau’s Quran in the Sambisa Forest assault – wanting to indicate he was on the run.

Each time such claims are made, the Boko Haram leader reappears in a video to mock them.

In the latest, posted on YouTube on December 29, he reiterates that “our mission is to establish an Islamic caliphate” in Nigeria – whose 180 million people are divided almost equally between mainly Muslims in the north and a predominantly Christian south.

“Kill all the infidels and detonate bombs everywhere,” Shekau says in the video. “Yes! I want you to kill, slaughter and abduct.”

A December 8, 2016 photo of soldiers standing near a military vehicle in Bama, northeast Nigeria after the Nigerian army ‘defeated’ Boko Haram in the Sambisa Forest. Photo: AFP

He makes no mention of some 200 schoolgirls kidnapped from a school in Chibok town who were believed to be held in the Sambisa Forest.

Nigeria is unlikely to see an end soon to the deadly suicide bombings, village attacks and assaults on remote military outposts in northeastern Nigeria. The Islamic State group, to which one faction of Boko Haram belongs, announced an attack on an army barracks “killed and wounded many” soldiers on December 22 – the same day the army said it seized the forest hideout.

A May, 2014 photo of Shekau in another video. Photo: AP

Already, there are reports that the insurgents have been regrouping south of their northeastern stronghold.

The seven-year-old Islamic uprising has killed more than 20,000 people, spread across Nigeria’s borders, driven 2.6 million from their homes and created a humanitarian disaster with some 5 million people facing starvation.

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