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Boko Haram video of Nigeria kidnapped schoolgirls: Heads bowed and covered, captive girls chanted th

Azizam

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Their clothes had been replaced by a new uniform – drab veils of black and grey. One of the girls stepped forward amid the Koranic chanting to state that she and her classmates are unharmed. But her eyes and shaky voice told a story of fear and duress.


Almost a month after they were abducted from their school in northern Nigeria, the first evidence of the fate of about 130 of the stolen girls of Chibok emerged yesterday after Boko Haram released a video alleging the teenagers had converted to Islam.

In a 27-minute film combining purported footage of the schoolchildren with separate footage of its confident leader, the Islamist terror group offered to release some of the girls in return for comrades held by the Nigerian authorities.

The video was an apparent glimpse of what has happened to the children since 276 of them were seized in the dark on 14 April from the school where they were taking exams. Both the location and the date of the footage were unknown.

In what was also the first sign that their captors may be willing to negotiate as Nigerian forces supported by experts from Western states scour a vast area in search of the girls, the Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau suggested they could be traded for the dozens of Islamist militants held in Nigeria’s prisons.

The proposition was initially rejected out of hand by the government of President Goodluck Jonathan, which has been castigated at home for its seemingly lethargic response to the mass kidnapping and an earlier threat by Shekau to sell the girls as brides.

Abba Moro, the Nigerian Interior Minister, told Agence France Presse that the authorities were not prepared to trade the schoolchildren. Mr Moro said: “The issue in question is not about Boko Haram giving conditions.”

That position was backed by the father of one of the captive girls. He said: “It’s not right. They’ll do it again.”

But last night the government appeared to shift ground and leave open the option of negotiation by saying it was reviewing “all options”.

Gathered under a tree, scores of girls were shown on the video. In the background two of their number held a black banner carrying the slogan of Boko Haram, whose title translates loosely as “Western education is sinful”.

As the camera panned across the group, three of the girls, who come from a mainly Christian community, were ushered forward. Two said they were Christian and had converted to Islam while the other said she is Muslim and the group was unharmed.

The teenagers appeared cowed and fearful with many casting their eyes down to the ground. Their appearance was in stark contrast to four of their classmates who escaped the kidnappers and were filmed in recent days in the bright traditional garb of their region.

At one point the camera showed one of the girls’ captors, wearing paramilitary garb with a gun slung over his shoulder as he held a small video camera. The footage showed just over half of the 223 girls who remain missing, possibly adding credence to reports that the abductees have been split into at least two groups.

Speaking in the local Hausa language and Arabic, Shekau appeared separately, dressed in military fatigues and wielding an AK-47 as he set out his terms, at times laughing and staring defiantly into the camera. He said: “These girls you occupy yourselves with … we have indeed liberated them. These girls have become Muslims.”

The Boko Haram leader added: “If you want us to release the girls, those who have not accepted Islam will be treated as the Prophet treated infidels and they will stay with us. We will not release them while you detain our brothers.”

Meanwhile, the Prime Minister David Cameron this weekend refused to rule out sending British troops to help recover the girls and bolster a team of counter-terrorism and intelligence experts already working in the Nigerian capital, Abuja.

A spokesman for Mr Cameron said: “[The video] underlines the horror and barbarity of the actions in the kidnapping of these girls. It underlines the importance of working with and in support of the Nigerian authorities and Nigerian people in terms of trying to bring about the release of the kidnapped girls.”

Israel became the latest country to have its offer of expert help accepted by Mr Jonathan yesterday.

The Sambisa Forest, on Nigeria’s eastern border with Cameroon where it is presumed the girls have been taken, is three times the size of Wales.

The scale of the kidnapping and the threat of Shekau to sell the teenagers “in the market” have provoked international outrage and a global campaign to secure their release.

Officials have privately accepted that Boko Haram may have been successful in penetrating army and government structures in Nigeria’s mainly Muslim north.

Residents of Gamboru, a border town repeatedly attacked by Boko Haram, including in an incident last week in which 300 people were killed, announced yesterday that they are moving across the border to Cameroon because they could no longer rely on Nigerian forces to protect them.

Boko Haram video of Nigeria kidnapped schoolgirls: Heads bowed and covered, captive girls chanted the Koran - Africa - World - The Independent


Click the link to watch the video.
 
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So how many more Boko Haram threads do we need?

It is a shame that those lunatics whose organization and actions are a result of local culture, a total misunderstanding of Islam and somewhat of a popular support that sustains them is getting so much publicity.

Anyway what to expect from a population that is mostly still illiterate and who do not understand a word of Arabic or their own religion.

No wonder that human sacrifices and cannibalism is still present.

I mean since those girls were kidnapped in Northern Nigeria a similar number of small girls in India have been misused. Either in the sex industry, forced labor or miserable living conditions. Or even kidnappings.

Yes, it's unfortunate but try to eliminate the root of the problems not only in Nigeria but everywhere else where small girls are taken advantage of or children in general.
 
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So where is the army of the most populous African country? No wonder that the African continent, mainly Sub-Saharan Africa, is buried in tons of shit despite being blessed with everything that humans could wish to have in terms of resources and opportunities.

Where they always like that or did it start with the Arab and later European conquests?

Pathetic. Africa's biggest economy right there.
 
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So where is the army of the most populous African country? No wonder that the African continent, mainly Sub-Saharan Africa, is buried in tons of shit despite being blessed with everything…..

Dunno about Nigerian armed forces.
Maybe @DurkaDurka knows.

It's a small army for the size of the population
 
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Dunno about Nigerian armed forces.
Maybe @DurkaDurka knows.

It's a small army for the size of the population

Nigeria is the biggest economy in Africa. Their population is nearly 200 million. They should have at least a potent army that can control their own borders and what is happening inside their own country. This is embarrassing. There are many talented and somewhat famous African armies out there. Especially Chadian soldiers are famous in the Francophone world of being solid and brave soldiers. Ethiopians are others.

Nigerians should potentially be that as well.

The South of Nigeria has enormous amounts of oil and gas.

I wonder why Sub-Saharan Africa has been such a mess for so long. What is going on with them? They have everything one can ask for.
 
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Nigeria is the biggest economy in Africa. Their population is nearly 200 million. They should have at least a potent army that can control their own borders and what is happening inside their own country. This is embarrassing. There are many talented and somewhat famous African armies out there. Especially Chadian soldiers are famous in the Francophone world of being solid and brave soldiers. Ethiopians are others.

Nigerians should potentially be that as well.

The South of Nigeria has enormous amounts of oil and gas.

I wonder why Sub-Saharan Africa has been such a mess for so long. What is going on with them? They have everything one can ask for.

boko haram, ISIS + other similar groups are always following the Salafi ibn taymiya ideology and quoting him, what do you think of this ideology, nothing good comes from it, time to ban it.
 
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boko haram, ISIS + other similar groups are always following the Salafi ibn taymiya ideology and quoting him, what do you think of this ideology, nothing good comes from it, time to ban it.

What is "Salafi"?

What do you know about Ibn Taymiyyah (ra)? Define that so-called ideology.

If there were more Ibn Taymiyyah's and no traitors belonging to a certain sect and nationality the savage and primitive Mongols would never have attacked Baghdad, Damascus and other cities in the Arab world and they would have been defeated much quicker than they were.

Ibn Taymiyyah - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 
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What is "Salafi"?

What do you know about Ibn Taymiyyah (ra)? Define that so-called ideology.

If there were more Ibn Taymiyyah's and no Shia traitors the savage and primitive Mongols would never have attacked Baghdad and they would have been defeated much quicker.

Ibn Taymiyyah - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

I don't know about him actually neither did I read about him, but I often see these organizations quoting him & following or trying to follow his guidelines.
 
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I don't know about him actually neither did I read about him, but I often see these organizations quoting him & following or trying to follow his guidelines.

He did not invent anything new. Neither of the well-known scholars did that. He only emphasized certain things. Such as the need for defensive Jihad when faced with invaders such as the Mongols etc.

IbnTaymiyyah.Com | His Life and Works

SunnahOnline.com - Ibn Taymiyyah

Watch the last video and you would know everything. The series are great. He has done it with nearly all major Islamic figures from the earliest times to later times.


Of course you can use simple logic and conclude that no past Muslim scholars have approved the actions of ISIS and Boko Haram (otherwise such groups would have existed hundreds of years ago and be a old and not a new phenomenon) and especially not so famous and respected ones.

You cannot prevent people with evil intentions from misusing your name. Those groups are also quoting Prophet Muhammad (saws) etc.


Regarding your first question then listen to the video above by the great late Sheikh Muhammad ibn al-Uthaymeen al-Tamimi (ra).

@doritos
 
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I can't understand the mentality of some members. Here, 300 girls have been kidnapped and the kidnappers are threatening to sell them into sexu@l slavery. And the primary concern of these members is not the welfare of these girls but how their religion is perceived by others. Are you human? I know it is difficult for you, but please act with some common decency.
 
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I can't understand the mentality of some members. Here, 300 girls have been kidnapped and the kidnappers are threatening to sell them into sexu@l slavery. And the primary concern of these members is not the welfare of these girls but how their religion is perceived by others. Are you human? I know it is difficult for you, but please act with some common decency.

Maybe you are not familiar with the already existing threads about Boko Haram? This thread is one out of dozens of threads. Why is it necessary to state the obvious when it has already been stated repeatedly in other threads dealing with the same issue? Of course we all hope that those girls return home safely. Only crazy people would think otherwise.

It's more interesting to discuss the reasons for that based on analyzing the social, economic and cultural reality of Northern Nigeria and to find out what to do next to avoid similar incidents in the future.
 
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Maybe you are not familiar with the already existing threads about Boko Haram? This thread is one out of dozens of threads. Why is it necessary to state the obvious when it has already been stated repeatedly in other threads dealing with the same issue? Of course we all hope that those girls return home safely. Only crazy people would think otherwise.

It's more interesting to discuss the reasons for that based on analyzing the social, economic and cultural reality of Northern Nigeria and to find out what to do next to avoid similar incidents in the future.

By calling Nigerians cannibals and practitioners of human sacrifice? After making such generalizations, you get offended when someone makes a similar generalization on your faith. I could easily make a few equally broad generalizations about your faith or your country, but that wouldn't be the right thing to do - not here, not when such a big tragedy is unfolding. Please show the same consideration to others that you expect from them. I'll suggest you edit your earlier remarks.
 
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By calling Nigerians cannibals and practitioners of human sacrifice? After making such generalizations, you get offended when someone makes a similar generalization on your faith. I could easily make a few equally broad generalizations about your faith or your country, but that wouldn't be the right thing to do - not here, not when such a big tragedy is unfolding. Please show the same consideration to others that you expect from them. I'll suggest you edit your earlier remarks.

This is not a generalization but unfortunately a fact that partially contributes to their misunderstanding of Islam and which helps create cults such as Boko Haram that are sustained by the locals.

Those are not generalizations. What I wrote about the realities of Sub-Saharan Africa, including Nigeria, are well-known but unfortunate realities. There is nothing wrong with mentioning that. Just like there is nothing wrong with stating that India has the highest amount of poor people in the world, that illiteracy is high and many other issues that are well-known.

Those are called facts.

A fact is also that Boko Haram do not act according to Islam.
 
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