Nigeria's president Goodluck Jonathan has declared a state of emergency (Reuters)
By Jon Gambrell
Admitting Islamic extremists now control some of his
nation's villages and towns, Nigeria's president declared a state of
emergency Tuesday [local time] across the country's troubled northeast,
promising to send more troops to fight what he said is now an open
rebellion.
President Goodluck Jonathan, speaking live on state
radio and television networks, also warned that any building suspected
to house Islamic extremists would be taken over in what he described as
the "war" now facing Africa's most populous nation. However, it's
unclear what the emergency powers will do to halt the violence, as a
similar past effort failed to stop the bloodshed.
"It would appear that there is a systematic effort
by insurgents and terrorists to destabilize the Nigerian state and test
our collective resolve," Jonathan said.
Jonathan said the order will be in force in Adamawa,
Borno and Yobe states. He said the states would receive more troops,
though he will not remove state politicians from their posts. Under
Nigerian law, the president has the power to remove politicians from
their posts and install a caretaker government in emergency
circumstances.
The president's speech offered the starkest vision
of the ongoing violence, often downplayed by security forces and
government officials due to political considerations. Jonathan described
the attacks as a "rebellion," at one point describing how fighters had
destroyed government buildings and "had taken women and children as
hostages."
"Already, some northern parts of Borno state have
been taken over by groups whose allegiance are to different flags than
Nigeria's," Jonathan said.
The president later added: "These actions amount to a
declaration of war and a deliberate attempt to undermine the authority
of the Nigerian state and threaten (its) territorial integrity. As a
responsible government, we will not tolerate this."
Since 2010, more than 1,600 people have been killed
in attacks by Islamic insurgents, according to an Associated Press
count. Recently, Nigeria's military has said Islamic fighters now use
anti-aircraft guns mounted on trucks to fight the nation's soldiers,
likely outgunning the country's already overstretched security forces.
Meanwhile, violence
pitting different ethnic groups against each other continues, with
clashes that kill dozens at a time. In addition, dozens of police
officers and agents of the country's domestic spy agency were recently
slaughtered by a militia.
One of the main Islamic
extremist groups fighting Nigeria's weak central government is Boko
Haram, whose name means "Western education is sacrilege" in the Hausa
language of Nigeria's north.
The group has said
it wants its imprisoned members freed and strict Islamic law adopted
across the multiethnic nation of more than 160 million people. It has
produced several splinter groups, and analysts say its members have
contact with two other al-Qaida-linked groups in Africa.
The
Islamic insurgency in Nigeria grew out of a 2009 riot led by Boko Haram
members in Maiduguri that ended in a military and police crackdown that
killed some 700 people.
The group's leader died
in police custody, in an apparent killing. From 2010 on, Islamic
extremists have engaged in hit-and-run shootings and suicide bombings.
Recently, however, they've begun to use military-grade weapons, some of
which they apparently seized from Nigerian military stockpiles.
It
remains unclear how much effect Jonathan's announcement will have. In
late December 2011, Jonathan declared a similar state of emergency over
parts of four states, including Borno and Yobe. The extremist attacks
continued despite that.
Nigeria's military and
police also have been repeatedly accused by human rights activists and
others of torturing and summarily killing suspects, as well as burning
down civilian homes and killing civilians in retaliation for militant
attacks.
The latest incident, in a fishing
village in Borno state along the shores of Lake Chad, saw at least 187
people killed and there are allegations that soldiers are responsible.
While the military has denied repeatedly that it attacks and kills
civilians, the country's armed forces have a history of committing such
assaults.
Separately on Tuesday [local time], an
official in the central Nigerian state of Kaduna said gunmen armed with
assault rifles and suspected to be Hausa-Fulani cattle herders killed 11
people in a village there. And in Benue state, a government spokesman
said an attack blamed on Hausa-Fulani cattle herders there killed at
least 12 people.
AP
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