Nigeria’s military yesterday
dismissed claims that a man beheaded by Boko Haram fighters in the group’s
latest video was an air force pilot in a fighter jet that went missing three
weeks ago.
Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau
had claimed in the footage obtained by AFP on Thursday that militants shot down
the Alpha Jet and showed wreckage of an aircraft which included the Nigerian
Air Force’s green and white roundel.
A man, wearing a camouflage print
T-shirt and with heavily bandaged hand in a sling, was seen later kneeling in
front of an unmasked Boko Haram fighter in combat fatigues and saying in
English that he was one of the pilots.
He appears to give his name, rank
and date of birth but the video is inaudible. He is killed after he finishes
speaking.
Asked directly about whether the man
was an air force pilot, as claimed, spokesman Air Commodore Dele Alonge told
AFP: “The man shown in the Boko Haram video is not our officer.
“The picture of a man beheaded in
the video is superimposed,” he said without elaborating. “Our plane is still
missing and we are looking for it. Boko Haram is just making unfounded claims.”
When asked the same question to
defence spokesman Major General Chris Olukolade, who announced last week that
Shekau was dead.
He said: “No level or amount of
barbaric display of bestial atrocities will distract the Nigerian military from
sustaining the tempo of ongoing operations to decimate, degrade and bring the
remnants of the terrorists already in disarray to due justice.
“The campaign against terror is
still recording the expected result in the front. Nigerians should not
despair,” he said in a text message that was repeated on his Twitter account.
Nigeria’s military has been under
pressure to reverse Boko Haram territorial gains in three northeast states in
recent months, with reports that soldiers have fled militant attacks and
complaints about a lack of adequate weapons.
According to one security analyst
who tracks the conflict, the Alpha Jet sent a signal that it had been hit and
the two pilots’ families met air force officers in the days that followed and
were told it had crashed.
The jet came down in the heart of
rebel-held territory, making search and rescue impossible, he added.
In the video, Shekau is seen on the
back of a pick-up truck firing a powerful anti-aircraft gun and boasting about
other aircraft Boko Haram has shot down.
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