BNW

 

B N W: Biafra Nigeria World News

 

BNW Headline News

 

BNW: The Authority on Biafra Nigeria

BNW Writer's Block 

BNW Magazine

 BNW News Archive

Home: Biafra Nigeria World

 

BNW Message Board

 WaZoBia

Biafra Net

 Igbo Net

Africa World 

Submit Article to BNW

BNWlette

BNWlette

BNWlette

BNWlette

BNWlette

 

Domain Pavilion: Best Domain Names

NIGERIA: Islamic militants kill three policemen, take 12 hostage - OCHA IRIN
Tuesday 12 October 2004
 
Regions
Latest News
East Africa
Great Lakes
Horn of Africa
Southern Africa
West Africa
·Benin
·Burkina Faso
·Cameroon
·Cape Verde
·Chad
·Cote d'Ivoire
·Gabon
·Gambia
·Ghana
·Eq. Guinea
·Guinea
·Guinea Bissau
·Liberia
·Mali
·Mauritania
·Niger
·Nigeria
·Sao Tome & Pr.
·Senegal
·Sierra Leone
·Togo
·West Africa
·Western Sahara
Weeklies
Themes
Children
Democracy & Governance
Economy
Environment
Food Security
Gender Issues
Health & Nutrition
HIV/AIDS
Human Rights
Natural Disasters
Peace & Security
Refugees/IDPs
WEB SPECIALS

NIGERIA: Islamic militants kill three policemen, take 12 hostage


[ This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]



©  

The Al Sunna wal Jamma sect was formed in Maiduguri two or three years ago

MAIDUGURI, 11 Oct 2004 (IRIN) - Armed Islamic militants killed three policemen and took 12 others hostage when they ambushed a police patrol near Lake Chad in northeastern Nigeria at the weekend, police said.

Borno State police commissioner Ade Ajakaiye said Islamic fundamentalist fighters modeling themselves on Afghanistan�s Taliban movement attacked a group of 60 policemen in the town of Kala-Balge, near the Lake Chad on Friday night.

The police had been sent there to pursue the militants following battles with them last month near the Cameroonian border, he added.

Ajakaiye said a police vehicle carrying munitions was stuck in deep mud and while the policemen were pushing it, they were fired upon by the militants. This caused the vehicle to explode, killing three policemen on the spot and injuring several others.

Twelve of the police contingent remained unaccounted for after "a fierce battle" and were believed to have been captured by the militants, he said.

Last month more than 35 people died in clashes between the Islamic militants and the security forces following simultaneous attacks on police stations in the towns of Gwoza and Bama in Borno State near the Cameroon border.

Most of the casualties in those engagements were members of the Al Sunna wal Jamma (Followers of the Prophet) armed fundamentalist movement, which is popularly known as the Taliban.

The group first took up arms in December 2003 when it overan two remote towns in Yobe State in northeastern Nigeria, near the border with Niger. It then remained dormant for nearly nine months before staging fresh attacks in neighbouring Borno state last month.

The sect was formed by university and polytechnic students in Maiduguri, the capital of Borno state, two or three years ago. It drew adherents from all over Nigeria, many of whom were the children of wealthy and influential people.

Ajakaiye said a joint team of police, army and air force units had been deployed to tackle the militants and had driven the group from the Limankara hills, where they were camped, into the swampy plain surrounding Lake Chad near the border with Cameroon and Chad.

Nigeria's volatile mix of religions and its history of repeated outbreaks of sectarian violence have made the authorities nervous about the emergence of Al Sunna wal Jamma.

The country's 126 million population is roughly split between a mainly Muslim north and a predominantly Christian south with a significant number of Animists in between.

The adoption of strict Islamic law of Sharia�h by 12 predominantly Muslim states in the north since 2000 has fuelled intermittent bouts of Christian-Muslim violence in which several thousand people have died.

[ENDS]


Other recent NIGERIA reports:

New fuel strike shuts down key cities,  11/Oct/04

Militia group wants troops out of Niger Delta,  8/Oct/04

Plateau state violence claimed 53,000 lives - report,  8/Oct/04

Obasanjo kicks off Africa's polio vaccination drive in hotspot state,  4/Oct/04

Peace deal reached in Niger Delta, but will it hold?,  4/Oct/04

Other recent Peace Security reports:

BURUNDI-UGANDA: Officials in Kampala to discuss elections, 12/Oct/04

SUDAN: Two relief workers killed by landmine in Darfur, 12/Oct/04

IRAQ: IRAQ CRISIS: Weekly round-up Number 82 for 2-8 October, 11/Oct/04

GUINEA-BISSAU: Mutineers amnestied but armed forces left leaderless, 11/Oct/04

CONGO: Ex-Ninja rebels, gendarmes withdrawn from train escort duties, 11/Oct/04

[Back] [Home Page]

Click to send any feedback, comments or questions you have about IRIN's Website or if you prefer you can send an Email to

The material contained on this Web site comes to you via IRIN, a UN humanitarian information unit, but may not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations or its agencies. If you re-print, copy, archive or re-post any item on this site, please retain this credit and disclaimer. Quotations or extracts should include attribution to the original sources. All graphics and Images on this site may not be re-produced without the express permission of the original owner. All materials copyright © UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs 2004




 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

BNWlette

BNWlette

BNW News

BNWlette

BNWlette

Voice of Biafra | Biafra World | Biafra Online | Biafra Web | MASSOB | Biafra Forum | BLM | Biafra Consortium

 

 

 

 

 

 

 Axiom PSI Yam Festival Series, Iri Ji Nd'Igbo the Kola-Nut Series,Nigeria Masterweb

Norimatsu | Nigeria Forum | Biafra | Biafra Nigeria | BLM | Hausa Forum | Biafra Web | Voice of Biafra | Okonko Research and Igbology |
| Igbo World | BNW | MASSOB | Igbo Net | bentech | IGBO FORUM | HAUSA NET (AWUSANET) | AREWA FORUM | YORUBA NET | YORUBA FORUM | New Nigeriaworld | WIC: World Igbo Congress