The Boko Haram Islamist sect on Tuesday
claimed responsibility for the attack on a multinational military base
in Baga, Borno State, during which about 2,000 people were killed on
January 3, this year.
The sect leader, Abubakar Shekau, in a new video on You tube also taunted Presidents Paul Biya of Cameroon, Mahamadou Issoufou of Niger and Idris Deby of Chad.
He also expressed disdain for President
Goodluck Jonathan, and the presidential candidate of the All
Progressives Congress in the February 14 presidential election, Maj.
Gen. Muhammadu Buhari (retd.), describing them as infidels.
Shekau, who spoke in Hausa said, “Jonathan, you are in trouble. And Buhari, do you think he is a true Muslim? He’s an infidel.”
Some local officials put the death toll as high as 2,000, although the military said it was 150.
The video was in the trademark Boko
Haram style, with the bearded man claiming to be Shekau in combat
fatigues and surrounded by masked gunmen.
“We are the ones that carried out the attack and it is just the tip of the iceberg. There are more coming,” he said.
On the weapons the insurgents seized from Baga, he said they were enough to annihilate Nigeria.
Soldiers fled the area after the nearby
army base, which is the headquarters of a multinational force comprising
troops from Chad, Niger and Cameroon, by Lake Chad was overrun. Chad
and Cameroon are being drawn into the fight against Boko Haram, but
mistrust has hampered cooperation.
Meanwhile, the International Criminal
Court’s prosecutor, Fatou Bensouda, has condemned the escalation of
“appalling levels of violence” in the North-East and warned that she
would prosecute members of any party responsible for war crimes and
crimes against humanity.
Bensouda said her office had continued a
preliminary examination into allegations that Boko Haram extremists
were killing large numbers of civilians, using girls and boys to
participate in the conflict and forcing massive numbers of people from
their homes.
She also warned the Federal Government of its obligation to prosecute crimes that “deeply shock the conscience of humanity.
“No one should doubt my resolve, if need
be, to prosecute those individuals most responsible for war crimes or
crimes against humanity,” Bensouda said in a statement from the court’s
headquarters in The Hague on Tuesday.
Boko Haram has increased the ferocity
and tempo of its attacks in recent weeks, with international outrage
over reports that as many as 2,000 civilians may have been
systematically slaughtered in the January 3, 2015 attack on Baga town
and the military base at the border with Cameroon.
The sect had also increased attacks on
Cameroon, raising fears that the conflict was spreading and prompting
the country to deploy troops to defend its borders with Nigeria.
Niger’s Foreign Minister, Bazoum
Mohamed, told a meeting on Tuesday of the Economic Community of West
African States to discuss a collective response to Boko Haram, saying
that the Islamic militants are no longer a Nigerian problem but they
threaten the security of the region.
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