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Islamist ultimatum

Mohammad al-Amin / mc June 25, 2013

Boko Haram insurgents in Nigeria's Borno State have ordered civil servants and Christians to leave two towns. The government vacillates between crackdown and dialogue.

https://p.dw.com/p/18vfR
Soldiers walk on April 30, 2013 in the street in the remote northeast town of Baga, Borno State. Fierce fighting between Nigerian troops and suspected Islamist insurgents, Boko Haram at Baga town in the restive northeastern Nigeria, on April 25, 2013 left dozens of people dead and scores of civilians injured. But the military denied the casualty figures claiming it was exaggerated to smear its image. Meanwhile normalcy has return to the town as residents are going about their normal business. AFP PHOTO/PIUS UTOMI EKPEI (Photo credit should read PIUS UTOMI EKPEI/AFP/Getty Images)
Image: Pius Utomi Ekpei/AFP/Getty Images

Hundreds of residents have fled the towns of Bama and Gwoza in Borno State following attacks and threats by suspected members of the Islamist militant sect Boko Haram

The insurgents were moving from house to house, issuing threatening letters saying that civil servants and Christians must leave Bama within seven days or risk being killed, according to one Bama resident speaking to the media on arrival in Maiduguri.

Borno State, of which Maiduguri is the capital, is located in the mainly Muslim north of Nigeria. Southern Nigeria is predominantly Christian.

Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan waves as he arrives to attend the funeral service for writer Chinua Achebe at Ogidi in southeast Nigeria on May 23, 2013. Renowned author Professor Chinua Achebe was buried at his Ogidi country home. Hundreds of mourners gathered on Thursday in the hometown of Nigerian novelist Chinua Achebe for the funeral of the man regarded as the father of modern African literature and the author of the widely praised 'Things Fall Apart.' AFP PHOTO/PIUS UTOMI EKPEI (Photo credit should read PIUS UTOMI EKPEI/AFP/Getty Images)
Nigeria Präsident Goodluck Jonathan (center) is under pressure to halt the violence in northern NigeriaImage: Pius Utomi ekpei/AFP/Getty Images

Ibrahim Aliyu, national director political and social affairs of Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) youth wing described the situation in Borno State as terrible.

"These people will come to Maiduguri town and attack a school so I think the government should do a lot more than they are doing now," he said.

The insurgents were chased out of their Sambisa Game Reserve camps by the security forces in a crackdown launched on May 14, but some were said to have regrouped and started fresh attacks.

Criticism of the government's handling of the insurgency

Nigeria's military said that a ground and aerial search was being conducted in the hunt for the insurgents who attacked Bama and Gwoza.

epa03095737 Nigerian boys sift through the remains of the Gamboru market after multiple explosions in Maiduguri, northern Nigeria, 07 February 2012. Three people have died in bomb blasts by the radical Islamist group Boko Haram in northern Nigeria, police said 07 February. Police told the German news agengy dpa that the owner of a pharmacy in the northeastern city of Maiduguri, and two of his employees, were killed when bombs went off. In the city of Kano, two police stations where Boko Haram members were being detained were also targeted. Police said there were no deaths. Boko Haram claimed responsibility for both attacks, which occurred as residents were observing Eid-el-Mulud, the Muslim festival marking the birth of the Prophet Mohammed. In the nearby town of Kaduna a man in military uniform was reported to have blew himself up outside an army barracks. Boko Haram Islamist militants have recently killed hundreds in bomb attacks across northern Nigeria. EPA/STR
Extremist in northern Nigeria are blamed for the loss of 1,600 lives since 2010Image: picture-alliance/dpa

This is not the first time that Boko Haram has threatened to attack Christian residents.

Last year, a purported Boko Haram spokesman known by the name of Abul Qaqa, issued an ultimatum to southerners living in the northern part of Nigeria to move away. Abul Qaga was reportedly killed by the Nigerian military last year.

Analyst Ibrahim Shamsudeen accuses the government of President Jonathan of failing to tackle the insurgency adequately. He says there is a confusing scenario in which the government has called for dialogue with Boko Haram, but at the same time it is waging war against them. "If there is going to be a dialogue, let there be circumstances under which these people will come out for dialogue,” he said.

Human right activist Barr Luka Haruna believes the conflict cannot be resolved by military means alone and that despite the declaration of a state of emergency "the government should look seriously to resolving this problem through dialogue.”