A screengrab from a new Boko Haram video shows
the Nigerian Islamist extremist group fighters parading on a tank in an
unidentified town
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A new Boko Haram
video obtained by AFP on Sunday shows militants on an armoured vehicle parading
down a road in an unidentified town they apparently control and the group's
leader Abubakar Shekau preaching to locals.
It was not possible
to tell whether the footage was staged for propaganda purposes, especially
scenes of residents cheering Islamist fighters.
The message appeared
to be aimed at reinforcing Shekau’s claim that he has created a caliphate
within Nigeria.
In the 44-minute
video, Boko Haram voices support for other so-called caliphates, including the
one proclaimed in Iraq and Syria by the Islamic State (IS) group.
Shekau, who is
pictured in close-up shots with rare clarity, again dismisses government claims
about ceasefire talks.
The video, which was
delivered through the same channels as past messages, shows armed men lined
along a well-paved road, with three pick-up trucks bristling with heavy weapons
also visible.
Black, crested flags
associated with the Islamist group are also shown.
Later, an armoured
vehicle rolls down the road lined with both fighters and individuals who appear
to be residents of the town.
A screengrab taken on November 9, 2014 from
a new video released by the Nigerian Islamist extremist group Boko Haram
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Boko Haram has
released a series of videos showing similar military hardware, equipment it
says was stolen from the Nigerian military. Such claims have been impossible to
verify.
No women or girls are
seen on the street or anywhere else in the footage.
Most of the message
is taken up by a sermon from Shekau, delivered indoors but apparently played on
a speaker to locals assembled outside.
"We have indeed
established an Islamic caliphate," he said, restating a claim he first
made in August.
The images of the
sermon include unusually clear close-ups of the Nigerian militant leader.
The leader of the Nigerian Islamist
extremist group Boko Haram, Abubakar Shekau, as shown in the new video
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Shekau has previously
expressed solidarity with other jihadi groups and leaders.
In the latest video,
he seemed to associate territory under his control with a wider, global
caliphate, but did not submit to the authority of any other jihadi leader.
“To everyone living
in Islamic Caliphate, we convey our greetings,” he said, specifically
mentioning “brethren” in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Azerbaijan, Shishan (an
Islamist term for Chechnya), Yemen, Somalia and “the Caliphate in Iraq and
Syria.”
A graphic shown later
includes a picture the IS group's leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi as well as a
portion of the message his group issued on July 1 proclaiming a caliphate in
Iraq and Syria.
Iraq on Sunday was
investigating whether Baghdadi was killed in air strikes by US-led coalition
warplanes.
A screengrab from the video shows Abubakar
Shekau (C, seated) preaching to locals in an unidentified town
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Nigeria maintains it
is still negotiating with Boko Haram envoys in neighbouring Chad and that a
disputed October 17 ceasefire declaration remains viable.
Violence has however
continued and the Islamists are believed to control more than two dozen towns
and villages in the northeast.
"There is no
truce between me and Nigerian tyrants," Shekau said, dismissing the
credibility of Danladi Amhadu, the purported rebel negotiator.
"This person
Danladi... if he thinks he can, let him show his face. By Allah, we will kill
him," the Islamist leader said.
©MailOnline
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