Nigeria's 'Taliban' plot
comeback from city hide-outs
By Emmanuel Goujon and Aminu Abubakar
AFP
MAIDUGURI, Nigeria
Petroleumworld.com 01 12 06
Defeated in the field by a bloody military crackdown, Nigeria's
home-grown Islamic insurgency has dispersed amid the dusty back
streets of the country's teeming northern cities and is plotting
its comeback.
Small numbers of militants -- inspired by the example set by Osama
bin Laden's Al-Qaeda and by Afghan and Palestinian guerrilla fighters
-- await the moment to re-launch their campaign for a Muslim revolution
in Africa's most populous state and main oil exporter.
"Allah, the almighty Lord, has authorised every Muslim to
fight to establish an Islamic government over the world. One day
it will happen in Nigeria and everywhere," militant leader
Aminu "Tashen-Ilimi" told AFP in his first interview
with the international press.
Tashen-Ilimi, whose nom de guerre means "new way of knowledge",
is described by his supporters as the leader of a small group
of mainly middle-class young men which in 2003 launched a violent
but short-lived uprising amid the sand dunes and savannah on Nigeria's
northern frontier.
The movement -- which was dubbed Nigeria's "Taliban"
after the Afghan student movement which seized power in Kabul
and created an ultra-conservative Islamic government -- briefly
took control of the village of Kanama on Nigeria's border with
Niger.
The group's 200-strong force raided several police stations but
was bloodily dispersed by government troops in January 2004. Eight
months later, 60 survivors launched a guerrilla attack on a police
patrol near Gwoza on the Cameroon border. A two day battle left
28 "Taliban" dead.
"Those who survived hid in Maiduguri or fled abroad. They
are coming back one by one, but are hiding, under pressure from
the security services. Tashen-Ilimi is one of the commanders,"
a militant sympathiser told AFP in Maiduguri, a major city in
Nigeria's far northeast.
If Tashen-Ilimi was disappointed at his small band's failure to
ignite a revolution among Nigeria's Muslims, who make up around
half of the country's 130-million-strong population, he doesn't
show it, and he has lost none of his passion for the cause.
"When I repented and discovered the true faith, understood
the true words of Allah, I left everything behind: my family,
my job, and migrated," he said, his eyes shining under his
black and white, Palestinian-style keffiyeh headscarf.
"I'm ready to take up arms. I don't know who gave us the
name Taliban, I prefer 'mujahideen'; the fighters. I only know
the Taliban in Afghanistan, and I respect them and what they did
very much," he said, at a safe-house in central Maiduguri.
"Those who fought in Kanama and Gwoza are only Muslims who
performed their holy duty," he said.
Although short-lived and small-scale, the revolt caused alarm
in Nigeria's capital Abuja and abroad, particularly in the United
States, where intelligence agencies fear the badly-governed wastes
of west Africa's Sahel desert could become a new haven for violent
Islamists.
But with the militants proving hard to track down in the overcrowded
and chaotic cities of the north, the crackdown has focused on
the preachers who are suspected of fomenting the unrest.
Mohammed Yusuf, one of Maiduguri's best known imams, has twice
been arrested on suspicion of leading the Taliban, despite his
protestations of innocence.
"These youths studied the Koran with me and with others.
Afterwards they wanted to leave the town, which they thought impure,
and head for the bush, believing that Muslims who do not share
their ideology are infidels," he told AFP.
Yusuf insisted that he urged the young men not to resort to violence,
but added that he shared their goal of an Islamic state: "I
think that an Islamic system of government should be established
in Nigeria, and if possible all over the world, but through dialogue."
The preacher still teaches "3,000 students".
Whether Tashen-Ilimi's depleted band of radicals will be able
to revive their armed struggle is unclear. Nigerian security services
take the threat seriously and have beefed up forces in Borno,
supplying local police with 54 new all terrain vehicles.
Borno State's spokesman, Usman Chiroma, dismisses the Taliban
as bandits "hiding their criminal activities behind Islam
to justify their wrongdoings."
But the militants are inspired by another small group which made
a big name for itself.
"Bin Laden did very good work. He obeys the rules of his
God. With attacks, he strikes fear in the enemies of Islam. I
may not be ready to do the same now but if I could I would,"
Tashen-Ilimi warned.
AFP
01/11/06
Copyright
© 2006 AFP. All rights reserved
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