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Posts Tagged ‘strict islamic law’

Dutch held ‘heading for Somalia’

Gunman in Mogadishu

Four Dutch nationals have been arrested in Kenya on suspicion of aiding insurgents in Somalia.

The four 21-year-olds, three born in Morocco, the other in Somalia, were stopped by Kenyan police as they were heading for the border.

The local police were not satisfied with their claims to be tourists.

There have been a series of recent reports that young men from the US, Europe and South Asia have joined the Somali insurgents in a "holy war".

Lamu District Commissioner Stephen Ikua told the BBC the four had travelled by boat from Lamu island before hiring a tractor.

He said it was possible they were headed to Somalia to assist one of the insurgent groups there and they would be interrogated in Nairobi.

map showing areas under Islamist control

The Kenyan authorities say they have arrested and deported several other young men from Tanzania and the United States in the same area for the same reason.

BBC East Africa correspondent Will Ross says in recent months eyewitnesses in Somalia have reported seeing foreigners amongst the insurgent fighters known as al-Shabab.

Al-Shabab wants to overthrow the UN-backed transitional government in Somalia and put in place strict Islamic law.

The hardline Islamists control much of southern Somalia.

Foreigners have headed to Somalia to take part in what they consider a holy war or jihad.

The authorities in Minnesota in the United States are investigating claims that several young men were lured to Somalia to fight.

Since early May, the fighting between the insurgents and the forces loyal to Somalia’s government has displaced nearly 250,000 people.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Islamist enigma

A burnt police station in the northern Nigerian city of Potiskum, 28/07

By Joe Boyle
BBC News

They have launched co-ordinated attacks across northern Nigeria, threatening to overthrow the government and impose strict Islamic law – but who exactly are the Nigerian Taliban

Since the group emerged in 2004 they have become known as "Taliban", although they appear to have no links to the Taliban in Afghanistan.

Some analysts believe they took inspiration from the radical Afghans, others say the name is more a term of ridicule used by people in Maiduguri, the area where they were founded.

"We believe [rain] is a creation of god rather than an evaporation caused by the sun"

Mohammed Yusuf
Militant leader

Militants ‘under siege’

Fear and tension after attack

The group’s other name, Boko Haram, means "Western education is a sin" and is another title used by local people to refer to the group.

Isa Sanusi, from the BBC’s Hausa service, says the group has no specific name for itself, just many names attributed to it by local people.

If their name is uncertain, however, their mission appears clear enough: to overthrow the Nigerian state, impose an extreme interpretation of Islamic law and abolish what they term "Western-style education".

Flat-Earth views

In an interview with the BBC, the group’s leader, Mohammed Yusuf, said such education "spoils the belief in one god".

map

"There are prominent Islamic preachers who have seen and understood that the present Western-style education is mixed with issues that run contrary to our beliefs in Islam," he said.

"Like rain. We believe it is a creation of god rather than an evaporation caused by the sun that condenses and becomes rain.

"Like saying the world is a sphere. If it runs contrary to the teachings of Allah, we reject it. We also reject the theory of Darwinism."

Mr Yusuf himself is something of an enigma.

He is believed to be in his mid-thirties, and analysts say he is extremely wealthy and highly educated.

"He is graduate educated and very proficient in English," says Nigerian academic Hussain Zakaria.

"He lives lavishly – people say he drives a Mercedes Benz. And he is very well-educated in a Western context."

‘We could see it coming’

Despite the secrecy surrounding the group, many in Nigeria say the attacks were far from surprising.

Mannir Dan Ali, a journalist with Abuja-based Trust newspapers, says there was a minor incident in early June which appeared to spark a series of statements from the group threatening reprisals.

"Now it is becoming a monster, the government has realised it has made a mistake "

Amenu Abu Bakka
Nigerian journalist

"The whole situation seems to be a failure of intelligence, a failure of the security forces to act before matters reached the point that they have now reached," he says.

"We could literally see it coming over the past few weeks."

There has been widespread criticism of the security forces for their perceived laxness in monitoring the group.

Its members are largely drawn from disaffected youth – university students and jobless graduates among them.

Amenu Abu Bakka, a journalist covering the area for the AFP news agency, says it is widely believed that the authorities were reluctant to deal with the militants because some of them come from rich families with connections to the government.

"People believe the government didn’t want to crack down on these people because their parents would get angry," he says.

"But now it is becoming a monster, the government has realised it has made a mistake and the earlier they deal with these people, the better."

No ‘swelling of ranks’

Divisions remain on how much of a threat the group poses – and how to deal with it.

Information ministry spokesman Sunday Dare says support for the militants’ cause is waning.

Police in Maiduguri pull a body from a truck, 27/07

"We live in a country where people are quite educated and I guess people are happy to make their decisions about Western education or otherwise and how it corrupts their values," he says.

"I don’t see a swelling in their ranks at all."

And Patrick Wilmot, a former lecturer at Jos university, said mainstream Muslims look on the so-called Taliban as "crazy".

"They don’t need to be taken that seriously, they just need to be monitored."

The BBC’s Caroline Duffield, in Lagos, says the group has isolated themselves from the rest of the community.

She says there have been incidents where local groups have prevented them from meeting in mosques and there is very little support for their stance in the wider community.

But the upsurge in violence has caused real alarm throughout Nigeria.

More than 100 people were killed as a wave of unrest spread from the city of Bauchi on Sunday through Borno, Yobe and Kano states the following day.

And no-one seems to know just how big a threat the so-called Taliban pose, how big their membership is, or what their next move could be.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.