Nigeria’s military on Wednesday claimed for the first time that Boko
Haram leader Abubakar Shekau was dead, saying troops had shot a
lookalike who had been posing as the militant commander.
Defence spokesman Chris Olukolade told reporters in Abuja that a
heavily bearded Islamist fighter identified as Mohammed Bashir died
during fighting in the town of Konduga, in Borno state.
Bashir, who was said to have had several aliases, had “been acting or
posing on videos as the deceased Abubakar Shekau, the eccentric
character known as leader of the group”, he added.
The announcement marks the first time that Nigeria’s military has
said publicly that Shekau was dead after two previous claims by other
security sources that he had died in 2009 and 2013.
The military did not, however, say when Shekau was killed.
Earlier this year, the spokeswoman for the country’s secret police,
Marilyn Ogar, said “the original Shekau is dead” and that the person
appearing in videos was an impostor.
Olukolade said on Wednesday that the name “Shekau” had become a “brand name for the terrorists”.
“The Nigerian military remains resolute to serve justice to anyone
who assumes that designation or title as well as all the terrorists that
seek to violate the freedom and territory of Nigeria.”
Nigeria’s military has been under pressure to regain territory lost
to Boko Haram Islamists in the far northeast in recent weeks and said it
has been conducting “coordinated air and land operations” to push back
the militant fighters.
Fears have been expressed about the potential loss of government
control in the region after Boko Haram claimed last month that the
captured Borno town of Gwoza was part of an Islamic caliphate.
Olukolade claimed that during fighting in and around Konduga, a
number of Boko Haram fighters were captured along with their equipment,
while scores of others allegedly surrendered elsewhere.
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