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Ga wani dan Boko Haram But honestly, he gave solid advice based on his experience. It’s something to really take seriously.” Boko Bala’i ce!!!

14,447 просмотров • 2 месяцев назад •via X (Twitter)

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U.S. FUNDS BOKO HARAM, PUNISHES NIGERIA FOR T*RRORISM At the 12 March US House of Representatives hearing on religious persecutions in Nigeria, Africa Subcommittee Chairman Chris Smith called on Congress and the Trump administration to impose sanctions on Nigeria for extremist group Boko Haram persecuting Christians. Oddly enough, the insurgents have long sought to overthrow the Nigerian government that is now under threat of US sanctions. Boko Haram aims to govern the country under their radical version of Sharia law and has been active since 2009, particularly in northern Nigeria. By 2021, the group’s t*rrorism had displaced 2.4 million people in the Lake Chad region. In January alone, a Boko Haram attack in the northeastern state of Borno, the epicentre of the t*rror attacks, reportedly k*lled 40 civilians, just a drop in the state's 38,000-person death toll between 2011 and 2023. Although Smith's request may sound noble, the irony is that US Congressman Scott Perry claimed on 13 February that the US Agency for International Development (USAID) had been funding t*rrorist organisations, including Boko Haram, Al Qaeda and ISIS. Nigerians have long sounded the alarm on foreign powers' role in strengthening Boko Haram's capacity. On 18 February, Nigeria's former foreign minister, Bolaji Akinyemi, also lodged similar claims to Perry's. He said that investigations revealed that locals report foreigners delivering weapons and supplies to the militants. Boko Haram does indeed pose a threat to Nigeria's security. However, in light of these accusations and given the United States’ long history of manufacturing crises by arming t*rrorists to destabilise states before swooping in with their 'Captain America' cape, can US sanctions really be the answer? What do you think? Let us know your thoughts in the comments below. Video credit: House Foreign Affairs Committee Republicans on YouTube (House Foreign Affairs Committee Majority on X)

African Stream

59,919 просмотров • 1 год назад

NIGERIAN MINISTER DROPS BOKO HARAM USAID BOMBSHELL On 18 February, former Nigerian Foreign Minister Bolaji Akinyemi dropped a bombshell amidst revelations that the recently dismantled US International Agency for Development (USAID) had allegedly been funding t*rrorist groups like Boko Haram. Akinyemi told Nigerian TV network Arise News that during an investigation into Boko Haram's reign of terror in northeastern Nigeria, villagers reported seeing foreign pilots operating helicopters that delivered weapons and supplies to the insurgents. During a congressional Oversight and Accountability Committee meeting on 13 February, US Congressman Scott Perry accused the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) of financing terrorist organisations. He claimed that the US funnelled nearly $697 million into initiatives that supported militant factions worldwide. Perry asserted that USAID's funds, allegedly intended for humanitarian and educational purposes, had been directed to finance madrassas (Arabic for ‘school,’ though often referring to Islamic institutions), t*rrorist training facilities, and extremist groups like Boko Haram, ISIS and Al-Qaeda. On 19 February, the US embassy in Nigeria issued a statement that the US had officially designated Boko Haram as a Foreign Terrorist Organization on 14 November 2013, including freezing its assets. Akinyemi, who returned to academia after his time as foreign minister (1985-87), said the Obama administration tied Nigeria’s hands in the fight against t*rrorism when it refused to sell arms to Nigeria in 2014, citing concerns over human rights violations by the Nigerian military in its fight against Boko Haram. In July 2015, President Muhammadu Buhari accused the US of indirectly supporting Boko Haram's extremist agenda by invoking the Leahy Law, which restricts arms sales to militaries accused of human rights abuses. Boko Haram has been active since 2009, aiming to overthrow the Nigerian government and impose a radical interpretation of Islamic law, or Sharia, whilst displacing 2.4 million people in the broader region. Video credit: ARISE NEWS (X)

African Stream

134,359 просмотров • 1 год назад

In August 2014, Australian hostage negotiator Stephen Davis, publicly accused former Borno State Governor Ali Modu Sheriff of being a chief sponsor of the terrorist group, the Boko Haram. Davis alleged that Sheriff sponsored youths for religious pilgrimages where they were recruited into the terrorist group. The news was reported internationally in 2014. ‘The Sydney Morning Herald’ ran exclusive editorial on these claims. BACK IN NIGERIA: Alhaji Buji Foi (also spelled Fai) served as Borno State’s Commissioner for Religious Affairs. He was appointed to the cabinet by former Governor Ali Modu Sheriff. The year was 2003. Alhaji Buji Foi was a national secretary of the Yusufiyya movement (the foundational group that became the Boko Haram). He was a close associate of the sect leader, Mohammed Yusuf. This was widely reported as a political pact to secure Boko Haram's support for Sheriff's 2003 gubernatorial campaign. After Governor Sheriff allegedly failed to fully implement the strict Sharia penal code he had promised, Buji Foi, along with other sect members, became disillusioned & resigned from his government. When the Boko Haram uprising broke out in July 2009, Buji Foi was publicly identified as a key financier & a member of the sect. He was arrested at his farmhouse & was extrajudicially executed in police custody at the Police Headquarters in Maiduguri, in late July 2009. The Senior Advocate of Nigeria, Femi Falana, publicly accused former Borno State Governor, Ali Modu Sheriff of sponsoring the Boko Haram. He made these allegations in September 2014. Femi Falana alleged that Sheriff's government had a deal with the sect for political support during the 2003 elections, which included appointing a Boko Haram member as a cabinet commissioner. Falana further revealed that Sheriff was arrested in Cameroon in 2012 for his alleged ties to the group, but was released after the Nigerian government intervened. The SAN then issued a seven-day ultimatum to the Federal Government of Nigeria, demanding the prosecution of Sheriff based on the findings of the Ambassador Usman Galtimari Panel. The Panel was inaugurated by Jonathan in August 2011 to investigate the root causes & the origins of the Boko Haram insurgency. Ali Sheriff should have let sleeping dogs. He decided to run a fool’s errand for a selfish mandate — when Nigerians were almost forgetting his past. A tip of the iceberg.

NEFERTITI

227,838 просмотров • 11 дней назад