A splinter group from the Boko Haram Islam sect, Jama’atu Ansarul Muslimina fi Biladis Sudan, otherwise known as JAMBS, on Saturday announced the murder of seven foreign expatriates that were abducted in Bauchi State, on February 16, 2013.
The expartriates who were kidnapped from
a Lebanese Construction Firm, Setraco, at Jama’are, in Bauchi , were
three Lebanese, and a citizen each from Britain, Greece, Italy and the
Philippines.
Ansary stated specifically that the
group executed the expatriates because President Goodluck Jonathan
contravened the sect’s warning by issuing a directive to security agents
to rescue the abducted expatriates.
He stated also that the hostages were
killed because five jet bombers belonging to the British Government,
soldiers and intelligent agents were sighted in Bauchi by journalists
thereby giving the indication of an operation to free the hostages by
force.
The group’s leader further alleged in
the statement that security operatives arrested several people including
women some of whom were killed.
“As it may be recalled that JAMBS
announced the capture of seven Christian foreigners and warned that
should there be any attempt to rescue them by force, will render their
lives in danger.
“The Nigerian Government has announced
to do so by any means, they ignored our warnings as the President
commands security agents.
“More so, the British Government sent five jet bombers, soldiers and intelligent… parading in Bauchi in order to rescue them.
“They also arrested many people including women and killed some of them.
“By this progress, the Nigerian and
British Government operations led to the death of the seven Christian
foreigners. Because a soul of a single believer (Mu’umin) is more than
the lives of thousands of believers,” the statement read.
JAMBS, which broke out of the
Boko Haram in January, also included supposed photographs of the
executed victims and a picture of a man dressed in what looked like a
military camouflage and was wielding a riffle on the Internet.
When our correspondent contacted the
Director Defence Information, Col. Mohammed Yerima, he couldn’t confirm
the killing of the hostages.
He said he was in Port Harcourt and that the network was bad. “In Port Harcourt, network is bad. Can’t confirm,” Yerima said.
The spokesman of the JTF in the North
East, Col. Sagir Musa, neither picked the repeated calls placed to his
mobile telephone line nor responded to text messages sent to him on the
issue.
Meanwhile, human rights lawyer, Mr. Femi
Falana, who spoke to one of our correspondents on the telephone,
condemned the killings.
Advising the Federal Government to dwell
more on intelligence to check insecurity, he described the proposed
death penalty by the National Assembly as a mockery of the fight against
terrorism.
Falana said, “Boko Haram menace has long
attained international dimension, having been linked to al-Qaeda and
the militants in Mali. Government has a lot to do beyond military
onslaught, it has to address socio-economic crisis in the country, which
lures youths into criminality.
“The National Assembly will have to stop
making a mockery of the war against terrorism by proposing death
penalty for terrorists. These people are ready to die; they are ready to
kill themselves. Death sentence for them is barbaric and
contradictory.”
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