Newsletter Newsletters Events Events Podcasts Videos Africanews
Loader
Advertisement

Nigeria's military investigates reports of Boko Haram leader's death

Nigeria's military investigates reports of Boko Haram leader's death
Nigeria's military investigates reports of Boko Haram leader's death Copyright  (c) Copyright Thomson Reuters 2021. Click For Restrictions - https://agency.reuters.com/en/copyright.html
Copyright (c) Copyright Thomson Reuters 2021. Click For Restrictions - https://agency.reuters.com/en/copyright.html
By Reuters
Published on
Share Comments
Share Close Button

By Camillus Eboh

ABUJA (Reuters) - Nigeria's military is investigating reports that the leader of militant Islamist group Boko Haram may have been killed or seriously injured following clashes with rival jihadists, an army spokesman said on Friday.

Abubakar Shekau has been the figurehead of an Islamist insurgency that has since 2009 killed more than 30,000 people, forced around 2 million people to flee their homes and spawned one of the world's worst humanitarian crises.

A number of reports published on Thursday in Nigeria media, citing intelligence sources, said Shekau was seriously hurt or killed after his insurgents clashed with members of Islamic State in West Africa Province (ISWAP), which broke away from his group in 2016.

Reuters has been unable to independently verify the claims.

A Nigerian Army spokesman, Mohammed Yerima, said the military were investigating.

"It's a rumour. We are investigating it. We can only say something if we confirm it," said the spokesman.

Shekau was said to have been killed on several occasions over the last 12 years, including in announcements by the military, only to later appear in a video post.

ISWAP was previously part of Shekau's militant Islamist group before its split five years ago, pledging allegiance to Islamic State. The schism was due to religious ideological disagreements over the killing of civilians by Boko Haram, to which ISWAP objected.

Shekau's death, if confirmed, could potentially end of fighting between the two groups, enabling either to absorb the others' fighters and consolidate its hold on northeast Nigerian territory.

(Reporting by Camillus Eboh in Abuja; Additional reporting by Maiduguri Newsroom; Writing by Alexis Akwagyiram and Paul Carsten; Editing by Raissa Kasolowsky)

Go to accessibility shortcuts
Share Comments

Read more

Farmers bring tractors to Brussels to protest EU-Mercosur trade deal

Colombia boosts military presence following police station attack

Azerbaijan begins fuel exports to Armenia by rail for first time in decades