The situation in Nigeria is yet another example of terrorism spreading out over Africa from Libya. Put it down to yet another failed US adventure
Boko
Haram being flushed out of hiding by deadly SNAKES and BEES because
militants fear they are spirits of victims haunting them
- Arrested Boko Haram gunmen claim militants are suffering snake attacks
- They say Islamists in Sambisa Forest are being bitten then attacked by bees
- Militants are now fleeing the area worried the attacks are supernatural
- There is supposedly concern that snakes are dead victims getting revenge
Deadly: Two suspected Boko Haram gunmen claimed that members of the group have now fled Sambisa Forest, close to the border with Cameroon (pictured), following 'incessant snake bites'
26,
June, 2014
Islamists
fighting for Boko Haram are leaving their forest hiding places after
a number of senior militants died as a result of relentless attacks
by snakes and bees, it has been claimed.
Two
suspected Boko Haram gunmen arrested in Maiduguri in north eastern
Nigeria claimed that members of the group have now fled the Sambisa
Forest, close to the border with Cameroon, following 'incessant snake
bites' and bee stings.
Nigeria's
army have been trying to flush the militants out the area for months,
but it appears they are now leaving voluntarily in the belief the
attacks are the spirits of their victims haunting them.
Guilty conscience: The militants reportedly believe the attacks are caused by the spirits of their victims. There have been widespread anti-Boko Haram protests in Nigeria (pictured) since the April kidnapping of 230 girls
Kolo
Mustapha, one of the arrested men told Nigeria's Vanguard newspaper:
'Most of us are fleeing because there are too many snakes and bees
now in the forest. Once they bite, they disappear and the victims do
not last for 24 hours.'
He
claimed that the snakes attack the militants first, before dozens of
bees surround the injured men and lead a second attack.
Many
of the Boko Haram members are now of the belief that there is a
supernatural aspect to the attacks, thinking the snakes and bees may
be the spirits of their victims returning to haunt them.
Mustapha
said he was only caught by a band of local volunteers because he was
taking extra risks to flee the forest in a hurry, such was his belief
in the mystical nature of the attacks.
He
added that other senior figures in his cell fled south east towards
Cameroon - forcing young men in the remote villages they pass through
to join them.
Devastating: An explosion believed to have be linked to Boko Haram killed at least 22 people in a shopping mall in the Nigerian capital Abuja yesterday
Wounded: At least 17 more people were injured in the blast, including this man being helped to safety. The government has said it will check the activities of 'insurgents'
The
second suspected gunman, Umar Abor, confirmed his friend's account,
adding: 'Almost all our comrades are leaving the Sambisa because of
constant attacks by snakes and bees.'
Describing
the attacks as 'a plague', Abor said the Boko Haram members fled the
area blaming themselves, due to their brutal campaign of murders and
kidnappings in northern Nigeria.
The
claims were reinforced by local volunteers who say scores of Boko
Haram militants have been seen fleeing the forest in recent weeks,
but until now the reason for their departure was not known.
The
bizarre development comes as the death toll from a suspected Boko
Haram bomb attack in the country's capital Abuja rose to 22.
A
person who had been treated in hospital succumbed to their injuries
this morning, officials said.
Nigeria's
government said soldiers shot and killed one suspected Islamist
militant as he tried to escape the scene of the attack, and arrested
a second.
The
explosion in a shopping mall occurred just an hour before the
national football team played Argentina in the World Cup.
Witnesses
said the blast left body parts scattered around the Emab Plaza in an
upmarket district of Abuja, as billows of black smoke could be seen
from a mile away.
Today
security agents arrested a 'luxury' bus containing 50 suspected Boko
Haram militants in the town of Obollo Afor in the area directly south
of Abuja.
Although
there is no indication the suspects had anything to do with the Abuja
bombing, they were believed to be travelling to different locations
in southern Nigeria, raising fears they were planning to carry out an
attack, according to Nigeria's Investigating
Reporters website.
The
Abuja attack turned what should have been a national celebration into
a national tragedy as Nigeria secured its place in the World Cup's
knockout stages for the first time since 1998.
The
attack came a week after 14 people were killed by a suicide bomb
while watching the Brazil v Mexico match in Damaturu, Nigeria.
The
country's national football coach Stephen Keshi said after the
bombing: 'How much of a victory is football going to give for those
lives? What are they doing these guys? They did it the first game,
and they now they did it again, it is sad.'
Although
nobody has yet claimed responsibility, the attack bears
hallmarks of Boko Haram extremism.
One
local man, Shuaibu Baba, was in a shop making photocopies when the
blast hit, killing his taxi driver who was waiting for him outside.
'I
lost a driver. And why? Because I came to photocopy for 10 naira
($0.06) a page,' he said. 'I begged him to take me here and this is
the end.'
Horror: Surrounded by blood stains on the floor, those injured in the bomb blast waited for treatment at the Maitama general hospital in Abuja, a relatively wealthy city
Officials
said the explosion hit while the district was at its busiest, packed
with shoppers and rush-hour commuters.
'I
heard a loud blast, it shattered the windows of the shop. We ran out.
A lot of people ran too, some with bloodstains,' said Gimbya Jafaru,
who was shopping nearby.
Boko
Haram attracted international condemnation for the April mass
abductions of more than 200 schoolgirls, and is blamed for this
week's abductions of another 91 people — 31 boys and 60 girls and
women with toddlers as young as three.
In
May, twin car bombs in the central city of Jos left more than 130
people dead; and a car bomb at a bus station killed 24 people in the
Christian quarter of Kano, a Muslim city.
Nigeria's
military and government claim to be winning the war in the
five-year-old insurgency against the militants.
But
the tempo and deadliness of attacks has increased this year, killing
more than 2,000 people so far compared to an estimated 3,600 killed
over the past four years.
Boko
Haram wants to install an Islamic state in Nigeria, a West African
nation whose 170million people are almost equally divided between
Muslims who are dominant in the north and Christians in the south.
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