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Mahamat Daoud Named New Boko Haram Leader

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Mahamat Daoud,Boko Haram,shekau[Boko Haram Has New ‘Shekau’, Mahamat Daoud]

*New Boko Haram head ready for negotiations*

The Boko Haram group has announced a change of leadership in its hierarchy. It replaced Sheik Abubakar Shekau as leader with Mallam Mahamat Daoud.

Chad President Idriss Deby said broke the news yesterday although he is yet to disclose his source of information.

According to President Deby, the new militant leader wants to negotiate peace with Nigeria

Shekau, who gained worldwide notoriety after appearing in a series of videos in which he threatened to sell the girls as slaves, has been replaced by another Boko Haram deputy who is said to be open to peace talks, according to Idriss Deby, the president of neighbouring Chad.

Mr Deby, whose forces have been fighting Boko Haram militants around Nigeria’s border areas, made the comments in a press conference on Tuesday in which he claimed that the group was now on the back foot militarily and would be finished “by the end of the year”.

“There is someone apparently called Mahamat Daoud who is said to have replaced Abubakar Shekau and he wants to negotiate with the Nigerian government,” he said. “For my part, I would advise not to negotiate with a terrorist.”

Shekau

Ousted Abubakar Shekau, the head of the Boko Haram Islamist group that kidnapped more than 200 Nigerian schoolgirls last year, has been ousted as its leader

It was not clear how Mr Deby had obtained his information, although rumours have been circulating in recent months that Shekau had gone on the run or even fled Nigeria altogether as a result of increased military operations against Boko Haram by both the Nigerian and Chadian governments. Little seems known as of yet about the man named by Deby as his successor, whose name may well be a nom de guerre.

“I have not heard of any individual called Mahamat Daoud,” said Dr Jonathan Hill, a Reader in the Defence Studies Department at London’s King’s College, who monitors Boko Haram’s activities closely. “But there are a number of characters claiming to represent different factions within Boko Haram, and their bona fides are often hard to verify.”

Mr Deby was speaking to reporters in the Chadian capital, N’Djamena, on the 55th anniversary of Chad’s independence from France. His claims that Boko Haram are facing imminent defeat will be questioned by some, however, given the carnage the group has wreaked in recent days across its strongholds in north-east Nigeria.

On Tuesday, a bomb killed at least 47 people and wounded dozens more in the village of Sabon Gari, near the north-east city of Maiduguri. Two days before that, jihadists shot dead four people and abducted five more in the same area.

Nigerian and Chadian commanders maintain that they have at least stopped the group controlling entire towns and neighbourhoods, and that the recent attacks amount to a return to hit-and-run tactics.

While claiming progress in the fight against the jihadists, who have repeatedly hit border areas of Cameroon, Chad and Niger, Mr Deby admitted that suicide bombers still posed a threat. But he added: “Boko Haram is decapitated. There are little groups (of Boko Haram members) scattered throughout east Nigeria, on the border with Cameroon. It is within our power to definitively overcome Boko Haram.”

It is not the first time that reports have emerged claiming Shekau’s downfall. Reports from the Nigerian military and media have declared him dead on several occasions, although experts also believe that the various videos that have appeared purporting to be him sometimes feature lookalikes.

He is believed to have ruled out all prospects of peace talks with the Nigerian government, allegedly causing rifts with other Boko Haram commanders who favoured negotiations that could also have led to the freeing of the schoolgirls.

Nigeria’s new president, ex-general Muhammadu Buhari, is understood to be willing to talk those willing to lay down their arms, despite pledging to take a firmer hand against the group than his predecessor, Goodluck Jonathan.

Dr Hill added that Mr Deby’s predictions of Boko Haram’s imminent demise could be premature. “I think it is a little too early to say that there is light at the end of the tunnel. It is also intriguing that the president of Chad feels sufficiently confident to announce Shekau’s departure from Boko Haram, given that we have been down this kind of road before. I do wonder whether Deby is practising a bit of mischief, trying to create internal discord within Boko Haram.”

By Tim Elombah

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