Sect leader slain in Nigerian police custody
Posted: July 31, 2009 at 5:38 a.m.
MAIDUGURI, Nigeria The leader of the Islamist sect blamed for days of violence in northern Nigeria has been shot and killed while in police custody, officials said Thursday.
The police commander of Borno state announced on state radio that Mohammed Yusuf, the leader of the sect some call the Nigerian Taliban, has "died in police custody."
He gave no further explanation, but the state governor's spokesman Usman Ciroma said: "I saw his body at police headquarters. I believe he was shot while he was trying to escape."
Troops shelled his compound in the northern city of Maiduguri on Wednesday, but Yusuf, 39, managed to escape with about 300 of his followers in the Boko Haram sect, some of them armed.
Troops reportedly killed about 100 militants, half of them inside the sect's mosque. Soldiers then launched a manhunt, and Yusuf was reportedly found in a goat's pen at the home of his in-laws.
A leading Nigerian rights group accused security forces of killing bystanders and other civilians. A military spokesman denied the charge and said it was impossible for rights workers to tell who was a civilian and who was a member of Boko Haram, which means "Western education is sin" in the Haas language.
The government warned people to evacuate the area before the shelling Wednesday, then shelled the compound and stormed the group's mosque inside, setting off a firefight with retreating militants armed with homemade hunting rifles and firebombs, bows and arrows, machetes and other weapons.
The bodies of barefoot young men littered the streets of Maiduguri, the capital of Borno state, Thursday morning as the army pursued the manhunt on the outskirts of the city. Police said most of the dead were fighters with Boko Haram. Army Col. Ben Anahotu said three police officers were killed.
Seeking to impose Islamic Shariah law throughout the multireligious country, the militants attacked police stations, churches, prisons and government buildings in a wave of violence that began Sunday in Borno and quickly spread to three other northern states.
Officials said at least 4,000 people had been forced from their homes by Wednesday afternoon, but it was not known how many have been killed, wounded and arrested.
President Umaru Yar'Adua said that security agents had been ordered to attack when the movement started gathering fighters from nearby states at its sprawling Maiduguri compound in preparation for "the holy war."
The militants are also known as Al-Sunna wal Jamma, or "Followers of Mohammad's Teachings," and some Nigerian officials have referred to them as Taliban.
League for Human Rights director Shamaki Gad Peter said that after the siege, rights workers saw the bodies of up to 20 people who were unarmed and appeared to have been shot from behind, possibly trying to escape the mayhem, he said.
Military spokesman Col. Mohammed Yerima initially denied allegations that the military intentionally killed civilians but said that the militants were indistinguishable from civilians.
"All the civilians that were living in that place were evacuated, to our knowledge," he said. "And those that remained in that enclave are loyalists and members of the group. So the issue of whether we have killed innocent civilians is not true."
He added, "The issue of identifying who is the Taliban or not, the human-rights groups are not fair to security agencies because they don't have any marks on their faces. There is no way to know if this is Taliban or this isnot."
Maiduguri resident Linda Dukwa said she had seen police execute two men Monday, frightening her and her family so badly that they did not venture out of their house, even for food, for days afterward.
The men "were dressed inwhite robes," she said, indicating they were sect members. "They were held by policemen. Then they shot their feet. After they fell on the ground, they [police]shot their heads."
National police spokesman Emmanuel Ojukwu denied allegations of executions.
"We respect the rules of combat," he said.
Nigeria's 140 million people are roughly divided between Christians in the south and northern Muslims. Shariah was implemented in 12 northern states after Nigeria returned to civilian rule in 1999 after years of military regimes. More than 10,000 Nigerians have died in sectarian violence since then.
Boko Haram members are particularly angry that full Shariah has not been implemented, especially the law's demand for a social welfare system helping poor people.
In recent months, police have been raiding Boko Haram hideouts and finding explosives and arms. The house at the compound in Maiduguri included a laboratory the military said was used to make bombs.
Information for this article was contributed by Muhammad Wahab, Bashir Adigun, Michelle Faul and Anita Powell of The Associated Press.
Front Section, Pages 6 on 07/31/2009
(Advertisement)
« Previous Story
6,000 Gaza children fly kites, break record
Thousands of children in the Gaza Strip attempted to set a world record Thursday by flying colorful homemade kites amid the ruins of Israel's bruising offensive earlier thi... Read »
Next Story »
Before recess, Congress OKs funds for jobless...
Congress has moved quickly to replenish depleted federal programs, including one supporting jobless benefits, that are in danger of running short of money while lawmakers a... Read »

Comments
To report abuse or misuse of this area please hit the "Suggest Removal" link in the comment to alert our online managers. Please read our comment policy.
Use the comment form below to begin a discussion about this content.
Registration is required to make comments. Click here to LOGIN.
You can register for FREE to post comments and receive alerts.