Militant Islamists
have released a new video on the insurgency in Nigeria, with Boko Haram leader
Abubakar Shekau again failing to appear in it.
His continued absence
has increased speculation about his fate.
He was last heard
from in March, when he released an audio message pledging allegiance to the
Islamic State (IS) group.
Soon thereafter,
Nigeria’s military said it had recaptured all towns and cities from Boko Haram.
The military said on
Sunday that it had freed 178 people held captive by Boko Haram in north-eastern
Borno state, and had killed a commander following airstrikes on its bases.
In the eight-minute
video, an unidentified young man speaks in the name of the Islamic State in
West Africa calling on people to be patient: “We are still present everywhere
we had been before.”
The video shows the
militants attacking a security checkpoint, seizing weapons, and slitting the
throat of a man dressed in a police uniform.
Mr Shekau also failed
to appear in a Boko Haram video released in June.
BBC Nigeria analyst
Naziru Mikailu says this will renew speculation that he is either deep in
hiding, or has been wounded and even killed.
Regardless of Mr
Shekau’s fate, it is clear from the video that some militants in Nigeria are
still determined to fight, he says.
The video is
gruesome, but its production sleek and this suggests that it was produced with
the help of IS-allied propaganda units, he adds.
The young militant
spoke in the regional Hausa language, with an accent from the Kanuri ethnic
group, to which Mr. Shekau belongs.
Mr. Shekau became
Boko Haram leader following the killing of the group’s founder, Muhammad Yusuf,
in police custody in 2009.
Previous reports
about his death proved to be untrue.
He sparked global
outrage when Boko Haram abducted more than 200 girls from a boarding school in
Chibok town in Borno state in April 2014.
He laughed in a video
clip, and said: “I abducted your girls. I will sell them in the market, by
Allah. I will sell them off and marry them off.”
The US government has
offered a reward of up to $7m (£4.6m) for information about his location. IS is
based in Iraq and Syria, has a foothold in Libya, and has vowed to create a
global caliphate.
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