Nigerias Boko Haram crisis: Anger at lecturer Nazeefs - TopicsExpress



          

Nigerias Boko Haram crisis: Anger at lecturer Nazeefs arrestSuspected Boko Haram sect members from left - Muhammed Nazeef Yunus, Umar Musa, Mustapha Yusuf, Ismaila Abdulazeez, and Ibrahim Isah - are paraded by Nigerias secret police, in Abuja, Nigeria - 20 Wednesday November 2013 Lecturer Muhammed Nazeef Yunus (L) said he preached against Boko Haram Continue reading the main story Nigeria under attackBadge of honour? Afraid to go to school Dead or alive Vigilante war The family of a Nigerian Islamic studies lecturer accused of being a Boko Haram leader has told the BBC that his arrest was a set up. They said it was outrageous to suggest he belonged to the militants behind the insurgency in northern Nigeria. Muhammad Nazeef Yunus was paraded before journalists this week, accused of recruiting militants in the central Kogi state where he lectures. In his research thesis, he condemned Boko Haram, his brother told the BBC. The Boko Haram leader with a paper in his hand - Nigeria The Boko Haram leaders preach against Western education Boko Harams insurgency, which began in earnest in 2010, has centred in the largely Muslim north-east of Nigeria, where three states have been under emergency rule since May as the security forces try to crush the militants. The group, which is opposed to Western education, wants to impose strict Islamic law in northern Nigeria. Several thousand people have been killed in the past three years. Critical of authorities Continue reading the main story Boko Haram at a glance Founded in 2002 Official Arabic name, Jamaatu Ahlis Sunna Liddaawati wal-Jihad, means People Committed to the Propagation of the Prophets Teachings and Jihad Nicknamed Boko Haram, a phrase in the local Hausa language meaning, Western education is forbidden Launched military operations in 2009 to create an Islamic state, killing thousands Founding leader Mohammed Yusuf killed in same year in police custody Succeeded by Abubakar Shekau Blacklisted by the US as a terrorist group Who are Boko Haram? Mr Nazeef, who is an assistant lecturer in Arabic and Islamic Studies at Kogi State University, was paraded along with four other suspects accused by the secret police of plotting to launch attacks in Igalaland, Kogi state. The BBCs Ishaq Khalid in Jos, the capital of Plateau state where the lecturer and his family live, says Mr Nazeef was arrested on 29 October, a few days after publicly criticising the Nigerian authorities. In a sermon at a mosque in Jos he had said the way heads of security agencies were appointed was a concern, suggesting they were biased against Muslims, our reporter says. Certainly, this is a set up, the lecturers wife, Saadatu Shuaibu, told the BBC Hausa Service about the arrest. [Everybody] knows that Nazeef Yunus is not a member of Boko Haram. People are witnesses to his preaching and I also listen to recordings of the preaching and I never heard him preach violence, she said. His brother, Hadi Yunus, agreed that Mr Nazeef, who is also the director of a secondary school in Jos which follows an Islamic and Western curriculum, often lectured against the ideologies of Boko Haram. One of the suspects arrested along with Mr Nazeef said he was recruited in May after he lost his job and was paid ($315, £195) a month by the group. Along with the other young men paraded before journalists in the capital, Abuja, he alleged that he had been indoctrinated by Mr Nazeef, the alleged leader of the cell in Kogi state. I was shocked when the other suspects insisted that I was a member and the one that recruited them into the sect. I have never been a member of Boko Haram for one minute in my life, I even preach against them, he said. Boko Haram, which along with its offshoot Ansaru, was last week blacklisted as a terrorist organisation by the US. On Wednesday, MPs in Nigerias lower house of parliament unanimously backed extending the state of emergency in the north-east for a further six months following a closed-door briefing by security chiefs. The upper house had already given its consent after President Goodluck Jonathans extension request earlier this month.
Posted on: Sat, 23 Nov 2013 05:57:26 +0000

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