Nigerian govt accuses state of training "jihadists"
By Ola Awoniyi
AFP
ABUJA
Petroleumworld.com 02 10 06
Nigeria's federal government accused a northern state on Thursday
of collaborating with foreign powers to train 100 Muslim militants
in intelligence gathering and the "practice of jihad".
Information Minister Frank Nweke said the "Hisbah",
a group employed by the mainly Muslim state of Kano to enforce
sharia law, was "a parallel security outfit that poses a
potential threat to national security".
In a separate statement, Nigeria's police chief, Inspector General
Sunday Ehindero, ordered that the Hisbah be immediately disbanded.
Nigeria's 130-million-strong population is divided roughly evenly
between Muslims and Christians and northern cities, including
Kano, have often been the scene of bloody sectarian clashes between
rival religious groups.
Kano is one of a dozen northern states to have attempted to reintroduce
Islamic sharia law to replace Nigerian criminal law since 1999.
Its governor, Ibrahim Shekarau, is an opponent of President Olusegun
Obasanjo and was elected in 2003 on a strongly Islamist ticket.
He formed the Hisbah to enforce his government's conservative
social policies.
"The Kano State Hisbah Board has, with brazen disregard for
the overriding imperatives of national security, sought the assistance
of foreign governments for the training of 100 jihadists,"
Nweke alleged.
He did not say which governments had been asked to train the militants
in intelligence and the "practice of jihad", an Arabic
religious term which some political Islamists interpret as a mandate
for "holy war".
"The federal government wishes to state emphatically that
it will not tolerate the establishment of unconstitutional and
illegal security outfits by governments, groups or individuals,"
Nweke added.
Shekarau, however, was defiant.
In a radio broadcast he insisted the Hisbah had been set up by
a law enacted by Kano's elected state assembly and could not be
declared unconstitutional unless the federal government proved
its case in court.
"It is a blunder for anybody to interpret Hisbah as an independent
terrorist group ... We are ready to challenge anybody who dares
Allah's law. We will pursue all constitutional means to assert
out right on this issue," he said.
Even before the goverment's allegation was made public, tension
was rising in Kano ahead of Friday's weekly Muslim prayers and
a planned demonstration by a hardline Shiite group.
Muslim leaders in the city vowed to bring thousands of believers
onto the streets after Friday prayers to join worldwide protests
against caricatures of the Prophet Mohammed that have appeared
in the European press.
Kano street demonstrations often descend into violence, and the
federal police are expected to be out in force to prevent clashes
erupting between Muslims and the city's small but prosperous Christian
minority.
There has been little evidence to date of Nigeria developing its
own violent Jihadi movement like Afghanistan's Taliban or the
Wahhabi groups loosely led or inspired by Saudi radical Osama
bin Laden and his al-Qaeda movement.
In late 2004, there was shortlived uprising by an armed group
of self-styled "mujahideen" seeking to create an Islamic
state on Nigeria's northern frontier, but they were quickly and
bloodily suppressed by federal forces.
Nevertheless, US and other international observers fear that growing
poverty in the north and moves by Obasanjo, a southern Christian,
to change the constitution and run for a third term could stoke
Islamist sentiment.
Last week John Negroponte, head of US spy agencies, said "speculation
that President Obasanjo will try to change the constitution ...
is raising political tensions and, if proven true, threatens to
unleash major turmoil and conflict.
"Such chaos in Nigeria could lead to disruption of oil supply,
secessionist moves by regional governments, major refugee flows
and instability elsewhere in West Africa," he told US senators.
AFP
02/09/06
Copyright
© 2006 AFP. All rights reserved
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