Boko Haram has claimed responsibility for the 14 March attack  on 
Giwa Barracks in Maiduguri, Borno State in Nigeria’s northeast.
To
 demonstrate how easily they raided the barracks, they producing the 
video of the operation, with their leader, Abubakar Shekau  warning of 
further bloodshed, including against civilians.
“We carried out 
the attacks in Maiduguri (on March 14),” said a man dressed in white, 
wearing black headgear and carrying an assault rifle, claiming to be the
 group’s leader, Abubakar Shekau. He spoke in the video just obtained by
 AFP.
AFP reporter who had seen the video said the man who called 
himself Shekau appeared younger, thinner and with different mannerisms 
from older videos, which could prompt fresh questions about whether the 
militant le
The United States has declared Shekau a global terrorist and put a $7
 million (5.1-million-euro) bounty on his head. Nigeria has separately 
offered 50 million naira ($300,000) for information leading to his 
capture or death.
He was reported to have been killed in a gun 
battle in northeast Nigeria between July 25 and August 3 last year, 
although a man resembling him has featured in a number of videos since 
then.
Nigeria’s military has yet to confirm officially whether 
Shekau is still alive and defence spokesman Chris Olukolade has said 
that whoever was making the claims in the videos was immaterial.
“That’s not the issue in this matter. They’re all terrorists,” he told AFP in a March 14 interview.
In
 the latest video, which was obtained via the same channels as previous 
statements, the man claiming to be Shekau speaks for 37 minutes in the 
local Hausa and Kanuri languages, as well as Arabic.
Footage then 
follows showing what appear to be heavily armed Boko Haram fighters 
arriving in pick-up trucks and firing on the Giwa barracks in Maiduguri 
with assault rifles and rocket propelled grenades.
- Claims of ill-treatment
The video shows hundreds of people, most of them young men in 
civilian clothes but also some women, apparently running away from the 
compound.
Boko Haram claimed in the video that they freed about 
2,000 of their brothers in arms, some of whom recounted at length their 
experience at the facility, alleging torture by the military.
“We 
launched the Maiduguri attacks and killed infidels in Giwa barracks,” 
said the man who insists several times that he is Shekau, adding a 
warning about members of the public who have joined civilian vigilante 
groups against them.
“There are only two groups of people in the 
world. There are either those with us or those on the other side, which 
I’ll kill once I spot them. This is my only focus now,” he said.
“This
 is Shekau speaking… By Allah, I will slaughter you. I’m not happy if I 
don’t slit your throats. I’ll slaughter you, I’ll slaughter you, I’ll 
slaughter you.”
The video repeats claims made in a previous video 
obtained on February 19 about Boko Haram members killing a prominent 
Muslim cleric who had criticised the group and threatening to attack oil
 wells in southern Nigeria.
“We are not fighting the north, we are fighting the world. And you will see us fighting the world. This is our job,” he added.
- Upsurge in violence -
Boko Haram wants to create a separate Islamic state in northern Nigeria and has been blamed for thousands of deaths since 2009.
Nigeria’s
 military imposed a state of emergency in three northeastern states in 
May last year in an attempt to stop the bloodshed but violence has 
continued.
This year, more than 700 people have been killed 
already, most of them civilians in remote rural areas, while tens of 
thousands have fled their homes.
Nigeria’s military claims that 
measures introduced to prevent the militants from seeking safe haven 
outside Nigeria, notably in northern Cameroon, are the reason for the 
upsurge in violence as the group is lashing out.
Top brass said the Giwa barracks attack was a sign of desperation and an indication that Boko Haram’s ranks were depleted.
Nigeria’s
 national security adviser last week announced “soft power” measures 
designed to complement the military offensive, including 
“de-radicalisation” programmes for Boko Haram suspects and closer 
cooperation with local people.
The measures were seen as a recognition that Nigeria had realised that force alone could not end the crisis.
 -
Hundreds
 of suspected Boko Haram fighters have been held at the barracks in the 
capital of northeastern Borno state in conditions that have been 
strongly criticised by international rights groups..
ader, who had previously been reported killed, is still 
alive.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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