Tuesday, December 24, 2013

Nigerian extremists abduct soldiers’ wives, kids

 Nigeria’s military is in hot pursuit of Islamic extremists who abducted soldiers’ wives and children when they attacked a barracks in northeast Nigeria, witnesses said Tuesday.
The bodies of presumed terrorists killed in Friday’s attack on a tank battalion in Bama town are rotting in the desert heat but residents say they are too scared to bury them.
The corpses are beginning to smell, there are many corpses lying out there in the bush ... but no one dares touch them, lest you are labeled a relation or collaborator,” said resident Babagana Bama.
Defense Ministry spokesman Maj. Gen. Chris Olukolade said security forces have killed at least 50 insurgents in an ongoing operation to catch the attackers. Fifteen soldiers and five civilians died in Friday’s attack on a tank battalion in Bama and in the pursuit, he said in a statement.
“Intensive cordon and search operations are still ongoing to fish out the insurgents who might be lurking around communities in the area,” Olukolade said.
Bama said the extremists “abducted many women and children and took them away.”
Seizing relatives is also practiced by the other side. Nigeria’s military routinely detains relatives of suspects, sometimes holding them hostage if a wanted person does not give himself up. The leader of the Boko Haram terrorist network, Abubakar Shekau, has repeatedly warned that they will retaliate with kidnappings of the family of security forces. 
Dozens of wives and children of the insurgents were illegally detained for months and then released in May, when the government was trying to negotiate an amnesty. No agreement was reached and Shekau has said he will not negotiate with “infidels,” or non-believers. He says he is fighting to impose Islamic law across Nigeria, Africa’s most populous nation of more than 160 million people almost equally divided between the predominantly Muslim north and mainly Christian south.
Thousands of Muslims and Christians have been killed in the uprising, which poses the most serious threat to the security and cohesion of Africa’s biggest oil producer since the civil war to create a separate state of Biafra in the 1960s.
Olukolade said the attackers came across the border from Cameroon. Fighters from Cameroon, Niger and Chad have been caught fighting alongside the Nigerian insurgents, the military has said, raising fears the insurgency could spread.
Friday’s attack was stopped when the air force scrambled a jet fighter that strafed the insurgents, witnesses said. But not before the attackers set the entire complex ablaze, bombing buildings with improvised explosive devices, they said.
It was the second major attack on military installations this month. On Dec. 2, hundreds of fighters simultaneously overran an air force base and a military barracks a kilometer (nearly a mile) away on the outskirts of Maiduguri, the Borno state capital that is the birthplace of Boko Haram and at the heart of a military campaign using draconian emergency powers to try to put down the 4-year-old Islamic uprising.
Such attacks raise questions about military claims that they have the upper hand in the conflict. Security forces in the first few weeks of a state of emergency declared in May forced most fighters out of major urban areas, but they have been unable to dislodge them from a forested national park and mountainous areas with caves where they have been hiding out.

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Saturday, December 14, 2013

Nigerian military: Air raid kills extremists

Nigeria — Nigeria’s military says it killed scores of Islamic extremists in an air raid on a funeral in northeast Nigeria.
Spokesman Col. Muhammed Dole said Saturday that the Boko Haram terrorist network has been forcefully conscripting youths and abducting women but that security forces are in pursuit.
Dole claimed a recent offensive has “resulted in serious decimation of Boko Haram fighters.”
Friday’s were the first reported air raids since insurgents last week set ablaze two military bases on the outskirts of Maiduguri, capital of Borno state, and destroyed three fighter jets and two helicopters.
Reporters watched a jetfighter taking off from Maiduguri Friday, when Dole said the raids killed scores of fighters attending the burial of fellow insurgents.
Thousands of civilians have been killed in the Islamic uprising in northeast Nigeria.
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Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Nigerian survivor almost missed rescue diver

WARRI, Nigeria — He had survived three days in an upside down tugboat at the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean and then he saw lights in the water. Air bubbles rose around the cook as he squatted in an air pocket. A diver was coming. Rescue seemed imminent for Harrison Odjegba Okene.
But then the lights disappeared. Desperate, Okene swam through pitch-dark waters in the sunken boat to grab the diver. Okene couldn’t find him and, with the air in his lungs giving out, he swam back to the cabin that held his precious, but dwindling, pocket of air.
In an exclusive interview with The Associated Press, Okene described the ordeal and his miraculous rescue that was videotaped and which went viral after it was put on the Internet this month.
The 29-year-old still has nightmares and vows to never return to the sea again. He has taken a new job as cook on firm ground instead.
Okene was the only survivor in a crew of 12 when the boat capsized in May. It still haunts him. In addition with being saddled with survivors’ guilt, some Nigerians believe he saved himself through black magic.
The Jascon 4 was resting on the seabed upside down at a depth of about 100 feet (30 meters).
The chubby cook survived on only one bottle of Coke. Two flashlights that he had found gave up after less than one day. In the dark, he had almost given up hope after three days when he suddenly heard the sound of a boat, a hammering on the side of the vessel and then, after a while, saw lights and the rising waters around him bubbling.
He said he knew it had to be a diver, but he was on the wrong end of the cabin.
“He came in but he was too fast, so I saw the light but before I could get to him, he was already out. I tried to follow him in the pitch darkness but I couldn’t trace him, so I went back.”
His rescuers from the Dutch company DCN Diving were looking only for bodies and already had recovered four corpses when they came upon Okene.
When the diver returned, Okene had to swim again to reach him and still he did not see him. “So I tapped him at the back of his neck, so he was afraid.” When the diver saw his hand he said “corpse, corpse, a corpse,” into his microphone, reporting up to the rescue vessel.
“When he brought his hand close to me, I pulled on his hand,” Okene said.
“He’s alive! He’s alive! He’s alive!” Okene remembers hearing.
Okene described a surreal scene after the diver emerged into the air pocket.
“I knew when he gave me water he was observing me (to see) if I’m really human, because he was afraid,” he told the AP last Thursday.
The diver first used hot water to warm him up, then attached him to an oxygen mask. Once saved from sunken boat, he was put into a decompression chamber for 60 hours before he could safely return to the surface.
Until his rescue, Okene believed his colleagues must have escaped. The tug was one of three towing a Chevron oil tanker in Nigeria’s oil-rich Delta waters, but on May 26 there was a sudden lurch and it keeled over.
“I heard people shouting, I felt the vessel going down, going down, I heard a voice saying ‘Is this vessel sinking or what?’ ... I was in the WC (toilet) and the WC fell on my head, things started falling on my head ... My colleagues were shouting ‘God help me, God help me, God help me.’ Then after a while I never heard from them (again).”
When recounting the rescue at his local church, the pastor asked him if he had used black magic to survive.
“I was so surprised! How could a man of God be saying this?” Okene said, his voice rising in disbelief.
He didn’t go to the funerals of his colleagues because he feared their families’ reactions — Nigerians being generally very religious but also superstitious.
“I couldn’t go because I didn’t know what the family will say, thinking ‘Why is he the only one to survive,’” said Okene.
It’s a question that has shaken his steadfast faith. “Every week I ask (God) ‘Why only me? Why did my colleagues have to die?’”
His wife Akpovona Okene, 27, said he still suffers nightmares. “When he is sleeping, he has that shock, he will just wake up in the night saying ‘Honey see, the bed is sinking, we are in the sea.”
Okene said he made a pact with God when he was at the bottom of the ocean: “When I was under the water I told God: If you rescue me, I will never go back to the sea again, never.”
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Tuesday, December 3, 2013

OPEC scrambling to keep oil prices stable (and high) as it meets Wednesday


The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries meets Wednesday to weigh how best to maintain stable — but very high — crude oil prices in the face of rising U.S. shale oil production and jostling among the members of the cartel that hope to expand production in 2014.
Analysts expect OPEC to hold its production ceiling steady at 30 million barrels a day, where it has been since January 2012. But oil experts do not expect the group to resolve how much Saudi Arabia, OPEC’s main swing producer, might trim its output in the coming year to make room for potential new supplies from Iraq, Libya, West Africa, Texas, North Dakota and maybe Iran.
U.S. output has grown about 15 percent this year, adding about 950,000 barrels a day, or about 1 percent, to world supplies, according to the International Energy Agency. The new U.S. supplies have failed to significantly lower world prices as many analysts had predicted, but they have helped prevent a further run-up in prices during supply disruptions in Libya, Nigeria and Iraq.
A year ago, many analysts were forecasting lower crude prices in 2013 because of weak global demand and the boom in U.S. shale oil supplies. But international crude prices have stayed near historic highs, despite Saudi Arabia boosting its own output to record levels of more than 10 million barrels a day over the summer. The average weighted price of OPEC crude oil in 2013 has been more than $105 a barrel for the third consecutive year, four times the price a decade ago.
“To some extent, U.S. production growth is keeping the price barely tethered,” said Robert McNally, a former National Security Council member specializing in energy who is president of the Rapidan Group, a consulting firm. “We’re keeping the market at low boil by giving it all we’ve got, and that to me is not a well-managed market.”
One reason: Oil consumption has been rising slowly but steadily. On Monday, oil prices rose on news that manufacturing indexes grew faster than expected in the United States and China. The price of the benchmark crude oil West Texas Intermediate climbed 1.2 percent to $93.82 a barrel for January delivery on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The price of Brent, the more widely used international benchmark grade of crude oil, rose 1.6 percent to $111.45 a barrel.
In a Nov. 25 speech in Vienna, OPEC Secretary General Abdalla S. el-Badri saidthe organization expects worldwide demand to grow by 1 million barrels a day in 2014 as growth in India and China offset a slight decline in consumption in industrialized nations. Badri said OPEC expects supplies outside member countries to grow by 1.2 million barrels a day.
But Edward Morse, head of global commodities research at Citigroup, said supplies outside OPEC could grow between 1.5 million and 1.8 million barrels a day. “Non-OPEC production alone should be enough to satisfy demand growth,” he said. Moreover, inventories in the industrialized nations are big enough to cover 58 days’ needs, more than the five-year average. On the well-supplied U.S. Gulf Coast, Saudi Arabia is discounting some of its crude oil to maintain its share of the market there, Morse said.
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Friday, November 29, 2013

Rights group: Extremists abduct females in Nigeria

Nigeria — Human Rights Watch says Islamic extremists in northeast Nigeria are abducting and apparently raping women and girls.
A report Thursday also criticizes the Nigerian government for failing to account for hundreds of men and boys rounded up by security forces using emergency powers in the Islamic uprising. The London-based organization quotes witnesses saying hundreds have died of dehydration, illness and beatings while many other detainees have been executed.
It quotes commanders of vigilante groups describing the rescue of kidnapped women and girls in attacks on hideouts of the Boko Haram terrorist network. Some were pregnant and others had babies.
Human Rights Watch also accused Boko Haram of using children as young as 12 in hostilities.
Boko Haram is blamed for the killings of hundreds of civilians in recent months.
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Thursday, November 28, 2013

Key Nigerian governors defect to opposition

Nigeria — Five key Nigerian governors have defected to the opposition, in a blow to President Goodluck Jonathan’s governing party and its chances for re-election in 2015.
The defectors include men who control some of the country’s largest budgets and voting blocs — Gov. Rotimi Amaechi of oil-rich Rivers State in the mainly Christian south and Gov. Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso of Kano, the second most populous state, in the predominantly Muslim north.
The defectors’ leader, Abubakar Kawu Baraje, a former chairman of the ruling People’s Democratic Party, said the dissidents agreed to a merger after “exhaustive deliberation” Tuesday with the opposition All Progressives Congress and acted “to rescue our fledgling democracy and our nation.”
Two other dissenting governors said they still are considering their options.
The spokesman for Jonathan’s party, Olisa Metuh, said the Democrats “remain unperturbed as we are now rid of detractors and distractions.”
The defectors have “embraced a narrow group of ethnic and religious bigots whose main intention is to unleash a state of anarchy on Nigeria,” he said in a statement.
Jonathan’s party has governed since decades of military dictatorship ended in 1999. He has not said he will run, but supporters already are campaigning.
Many northerners say Jonathan has broken an unwritten party pact to rotate the country’s leadership between north and south to balance power in the fractious nation divided almost equally between Muslims and Christians. A Christian, Jonathan was vice president in 2010 when President Umar Yar’Adua, a Muslim, died in office. He took power and won 2011 elections.
Jonathan’s government is considered by many to be largely ineffectual in dealing with the huge challenges confronting Africa’s biggest oil producer and its most populous nation of more than 160 million.
An Islamic uprising has killed thousands in the northeast of the country. Neither Jonathan nor his officials have responded to charges that soldiers have committed gross human rights abuses and may have killed more people than the extremists.
Hundreds of people have been slain this year in ethnic-religious clashes over land and grazing rights across Nigeria’s Middle Belt, where decades-old conflicts between mainly Christian farmers and largely Muslim nomadic herders has increased despite the deployment of security forces and peace committees.
While Jonathan’s government has bought off militants whose attacks had scared off investment in the oil-rich Niger Delta, it has failed to curb thefts of oil estimated at 200,000 barrels a day — 10 percent of production and a big chunk out of the national treasury. Military leaders and politicians are believed involved in the thefts, with only a small fraction stolen by locals aggrieved at the loss of farmland and fishing ground polluted by decades of careless oil production.
Nigeria’s government is also seen as largely ineffective against rising piracy in its waters by criminals who have expanded their operations to neighboring countries in the Gulf of Guinea.
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Monday, November 25, 2013

Extremists kill 12 in north Nigeria village attack

Nigeria — Survivors say militants screaming “God is great!” killed at least 12 civilians and set homes ablaze as they rampaged through a village in northeastern Nigeria, an area that has been attacked several times.
Villagers who trekked nearly 100 kilometers (60 miles) to Maiduguri, capital of Borno state, said 30 Islamic extremists bearing guns and explosives rode into Sandiya village on Thursday in all-terrain vehicles and on motorbikes. The news came when survivors arrived Saturday since cell phone service has been cut by the military.
Reports of similar attacks in neighboring Yobe state could not be confirmed immediately. The area was tense Sunday with increased military checkpoints and patrols.
Northeastern Nigeria is under a state of emergency as the army battles an Islamic uprising that has killed thousands in four years.
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Tuesday, November 19, 2013

1 police officer killed in early morning attack on Nigerian police station

GOMBE, Nigeria — Nigerian police say one officer was killed when gunmen attacked a police station in Gombe state in northern Nigeria.
Police spokesman Fwaji Attajiri said three of the attackers were killed in the shootout early Tuesday about 40 kilometers (25 miles) from the state capital, also called Gombe.
Gombe state is relatively peaceful but it borders three northeastern states that have been under emergency rule for more than six months as security forces battle with Islamic extremist rebels from Boko Haram.
The last deadly attack in Gombe was six months ago on another police station. Boko Haram was not directly blamed for either attack but the rebels have killed thousands in the past four years, targeting security forces, government buildings, churches, mosques, schools and infrastructure, mostly in northeastern Nigeria.
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Sunday, November 17, 2013

Nigeria militant claim they kidnapped and released American sailors for ransom

Nigeria — Rebels are claiming responsibility for the kidnapping and release for ransom of two American saiLors off the coast of the oil-rich Niger Delta.

A statement purporting to come from the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta said Sunday that it received $2-million ransom for the sailors, mostly from Nigerian authorities.
U.S. officials had identified the mariners as the captain and chief engineer of the U.S.-flagged C-Retriever offshore supply vessel taken in an Oct. 23 attack.
Analysts believe the militant group has lost much of its operational capability, but oil pipeline attacks and kidnappings are still common in the Niger Delta.
Almost all foreigners kidnapped are released once ransoms are paid.
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Saturday, November 9, 2013

Nigerian military kills 5 suspected Islamic extremists near northern city of Kano

KANO, Nigeria — The Nigerian military says two soldiers and five suspected Islamic extremists were killed in shootouts early Saturday morning on the outskirts of Kano, a northern city that has been relatively peaceful in recent months.
Army Captain Ikedichi Iweha, spokesman for the security forces’ combined Joint Task Force, said the suspects were planning simultaneous suicide attacks in the Nigerian capital Abuja and Kano, the country’s second largest city.
In an email sent to reporters, Iweha said “intelligence available indicates that the terrorists were in the process of finalizing plans.” He said security forces also confiscated nearly 50 AK-47 rifles and hundreds of rounds of ammunition.
Iweha said security is being tightened in Kano, amid fears that insurgents are fleeing to the city from the three northeastern states currently under emergency rule.
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Thursday, November 7, 2013

Northern Nigeria receives its first commercial flight in 2 years

Thursday, November 7, 2013


Northern Nigeria receives its first commercial flight in 2 years

Nigeria — International commercial flights have resumed in northern Nigeria after a two-year suspension and despite calls for a continuation of emergency rule in parts of the region, an aviation official said Thursday.
Security will be provided for the newly-renovated international airport in Kano, Nigeria’s second-largest city, added Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria spokesman Yakubu Dati.
“We are paying more attention to Kano because of the volatile situation there but there’s been a lot of calm and a restoration of peace,” he said. “And that signifies the return of business.”
Kano has been the sight of many insurgent attacks, including coordinated bombings in 2012 that killed nearly 200 people.
A Sudan Airline flight that landed there Wednesday has already departed with new passengers, he said.
In the future, the airport authority hopes international flights will move produce as well as people. Roughly 70 percent of the vegetables grown in northern Nigeria are wasted partially because farmers have no way to export their products, Dati said.
Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan this week asked lawmakers to extend emergency rule in three northeastern states, which do not include Kano, also a state.
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Monday, November 4, 2013

Nigeria: Suspected Islamic militants attack wedding convoy, death toll varies from 5 to 30

YOLA, Nigeria — Suspected Islamic militants attacked a wedding convoy in northeast Nigeria over the weekend, the latest in a storm of violence in the region as government troops battle religious extremists bent on turning Africa’s most populous nation into an Islamic state. Authorities on Sunday gave conflicting accounts of the death toll, however — ranging from five to as many as 30, including the groom.
The attack took place Saturday on the highway between Gama and Gwoza towns in Borno state, military spokesman Lt. Col. Muhammed Dole said. That road runs alongside forests that are a known hideout of Islamic extremists from the Boko Haram network.
Dole put the death toll at five. However, Adamawa state spokesman Ahmad Sajoh said more than 30 people, including the groom, were killed. He did not explain where his information came from, but noted that the groom and his guests were from Adamawa, which neighbors Borno state, and had been driving home.
Meanwhile, a minibus taxi driver said he passed many bodies on the road near Firgi village in Borno, where the wedding ceremony was held. Firgi is near the border with Adamawa state.
“We saw a lot of dead bodies killed by gunshots and some by the roadside that appeared to have been slaughtered” with their throats slit, the driver, who asked to be identified only as Shaibu, told reporters Sunday in Maiduguri, the capital of Borno state. He did not say the exact number of bodies he saw.
Shaibu said his terrified passengers wanted to turn back, but “I took the risk ... and said God is in control.”
Boko Haram is leading an uprising aimed at installing an Islamic state in Nigeria, possibly the greatest threat in decades to the cohesion of the West African country. Nigeria is Africa’s biggest oil producer. Its population of more than 160 million people is divided almost equally between the mainly Muslim north and the predominantly Christian south.
Last week, suspected extremists attacked a military checkpoint in the same area, and witnesses said they killed at least four security force members and made off with army vehicles, weapons and ammunition. The Nigerian military never confirmed nor denied that report.
The military is still battling the Islamic extremists more than five months after the government declared a state of emergency and flooded three states that cover one-sixth of the country with troops and police officers. The security forces have driven the insurgents from major towns and attacked bush camps with aerial bombardments and ground assaults. Hundreds of combatants and civilians, mainly Muslims, have died in recent weeks.
But military officials regularly downplay the number of people who die in attacks by extremists and inflate the number of insurgents said to have been killed. With cell phone contact in the area cut for months — the military said extremists were using the network to coordinate attacks — information is slow to come out and hard to independently confirm. Journalists also have limited access to the Internet.
Some reports have yet to be verified. The military claimed two months ago that Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau “may have been killed” in an attack. When Shekau put out a video to prove he was alive, the military said it was investigating the video to see if someone was impersonating Shekau.
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Leader of Nigerian Islamic uprising says he commanded attack on city that killed at least 127

Nigerian Islamic militant leader Abubakar Shekau boasts in a new video that he commanded the Oct. 23 battle in a provincial capital that killed at least 127 people.
All but two were combatants killed during five hours of fierce fighting in Yobe state capital, Damaturu. It was the first major attack on an urban center in months in the Islamic uprising that has northeastern Nigeria in its sixth month of a state of emergency.
It Boko Haram’s latest show of strength in the face of a nearly 6-month-long military crackdown in which security forces swiftly freed major urban centers and towns under the sway of the religious extremists. But they have been struggling to hunt the militants down in hideouts believed to be forests and caves and across borders with Cameroon, Chad and Niger, from which they emerge to attack soft targets like schools and villages. Hundreds of civilians have been killed by Boko Haram in recent weeks.
The video, obtained Monday and dubbed The Battle of Damaturu, shows the bearded Shekau in military camouflage, cradling an AK-47 automatic rifle and speaking in Arabic, Hausa and his native Kanuri as he sings the praises of Allah.
“My brethren, this is the story I want to tell my brothers and the whole world: All this weaponry that you are seeing — it is Allah who gave this to his worshippers who are fighting for Jihad — all this ammunition was obtained in just one place.”
The blurry video pans to a masked and armed fighter standing amid hundreds of guns and ammunition belts and scores of boxes — all of which Shekau claims was captured in Damaturu.
He said he does not need to tell the world how many soldiers were killed — implying it was many — and accuses the military of lying about its casualties.
Nigeria’s military says it killed 70 extremists that day in a shootout at a checkpoint just outside Damaturu and that it “neutralized” the attackers, who then regrouped to attack Damaturu, where another 25 were killed. During that fighting, the militants set ablaze four police command posts in different areas of the city and an army barracks on its outskirts. They also looted the hospital’s store of medication and took off with two ambulances.
Nigeria’s military says it killed a total of 95 insurgents and lost 22 soldiers and eight police officers. An AP reporter who visited the mortuary counted 17 bodies in police uniform and 31 bodies said to belong to extremists.
The military also claimed two months ago that Shekau “may have been killed” in an attack. When Shekau put out a video to prove he was still alive, the military said it was investigating the video to see if someone was impersonating the leader of the religious extremists.
The fighting at Damaturu overshadowed a major victory in which the military in neighboring Borno state said they bombed two “terrorist camps” and followed through with ground assaults that killed 74 insurgents while two soldiers were wounded.
On Saturday, suspected extremists attacked a wedding convoy on a highway in a rural area of Borno state, with authorities giving conflicting accounts of the death toll ranging from five to as many as 30, including the groom.
Boko Haram’s Islamic uprising poses the biggest threat in decades to the security and cohesion of Nigeria, a fractious nation that is Africa’s most populous with more than 160 million people almost equally divided between the mainly Muslim north and predominantly Christian south. The West African country is Africa’s biggest oil producer.
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Sunday, October 27, 2013

Prisoner: Foreigners fight in Nigeria's uprising

Nigeria: Extremists from three neighboring countries are fighting in Nigeria's northeastern Islamic uprising, according to an alleged captured extremist whose account reinforces fears that one of Africa's most powerful Islamic militant groups is growing closer to al-Qaida affiliates and that radical movements are spilling across national boundaries.
"We do have members from Chad, Niger and Cameroon who actively participate in most of our attacks," said a young man presented to journalists Friday night by Nigeria's military as a captured fighter of the Boko Haram terrorist network.
The claim of foreign fighters indicates the growing influence of Boko Haram, which started out as a machete-wielding gang and that now wages war with armored cars, rocket-propelled grenades and improvised explosive devices in its mission to force all of Nigeria — Africa's largest oil producer and a country of 160 million that has almost equal numbers of Christians and Muslims — to become an Islamic state.
Boko Haram poses the biggest security threat in years to the cohesion of Nigeria, already riven by sectarian, tribal and regional divisions that often explode into bloodletting, amid power struggles ahead of elections in 2015 that likely will be contested by the current president, a fundamentalist Christian.
A harsh military crackdown in three northeastern states covering one-sixth of the country since mid-May has forced Boko Haram out of major cities and towns, but the security forces appear unable to prevent regular extremist attacks on soft targets like school pupils in which hundreds have been killed in recent months.
President Goodluck Jonathan's government, which is struggling to control the Islamic rebellion, for the first time presented an alleged Boko Haram fighter, a 22-year-old walking on crutches because of a bullet wound suffered when he was captured in a recent attack.
The young man refused to give his name, for fear that his family would be targeted. His account sheds new light on life inside the shadowy Boko Haram, which means "western education is forbidden" in the Hausa language.
The captured extremist member said religion did not figure in his life as a Nigerian Islamic warrior, insisting his leaders "had never once preached Islam to us."
He said the name of Allah was invoked only when "we are running out of food supply in the bush. Our leaders will assemble us and declare that we would be embarking on a mission for God and Islam."
He added: "I did not see any act of religion in there. We are just killing people, stealing and suffering in the bush."
Recently Boko Haram has carried out brutal attacks on mainly Muslim civilians. The new assaults "offer vital and disturbing insights" that "not only confirm many of the group's earlier developments but also al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb's, or AQIM's, growing influence over it," Jonathan Hill, senior lecturer at the Defence Studies Department of King's College, London, wrote in an analysis published online this month at africanarguments.org.
"These atrocities bear many striking similarities to those carried out by AQIM and its various forbears in Algeria," wrote Hill, who is the author of "Nigeria Since Independence: Forever Fragile?"
He noted that "despite the extraordinary efforts of the security forces, Boko Haram appears unbowed and its campaign undimmed."
Earlier this week, Justice Minister Mohammed Adoke charged that Boko Haram is being influenced from abroad. "Nigeria is experiencing the impact of externally-induced internal security challenges, manifesting in the activities of militant insurgents," he said while defending the country's record at a meeting of the United Nations Human Rights Council in Geneva.
Adoke did not give any details of the alleged external influences. Boko Haram fighters, including current leader Abubakar Shekau, were reported fighting alongside al-Qaida affiliated groups that seized northern Mali last year. The movement has also boasted that it has fighters trained in Somalia by al-Shabab — the group that claimed responsibility for the most spectacular terrorist attack in Africa in recent years that killed at least 67 at Kenya's upscale Westgate Mall last month.
Boko Haram has long been known to be receiving funding from abroad. Founding father Mohammed Yusuf was receiving funds from Iran, Sudan and Saudi Arabia back in the 1990s, according to Hill. Saudi Arabia, despite its status as a Western ally, for decades has been exporting to West and East Africa its Wahabi brand of purist Islam that, beyond the Middle Eastern kingdom's borders, has been taken to extremes.
Niger and Chad both have said they fear infiltration by Boko Haram. Boko Haram members from Nigeria and neighboring Niger were arrested in December in Cameroon, according to a report from Jacob Zenn, an analyst for The Jamestown Foundation and author of the report "Northern Nigeria's Boko Haram: The Prize in al-Qaeda's Africa Strategy." He quoted the imam of a grand mosque in southern Senegal as claiming that Boko Haram was recruiting local youths there in August 2012.
In a report written in January, before the military crackdown, Zenn said international collaboration between Boko Haram and militants in northern Mali, the Sahel, Somalia and other countries in the Muslim world have allowed Boko Haram to grow into an organization that "has now matched — and even exceeded — the capabilities of some al-Qaida affiliates."
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Thursday, October 24, 2013

Pirates kidnap 2 mariners from commercial ship off Nigeria, defense official says

WASHINGTON — A U.S. defense official says pirates have attacked a commercial ship near the coast of Nigeria and kidnapped two U.S. mariners.
The official spoke on condition of anonymity because this person wasn’t authorized to publicly discuss the information. The official said Thursday that a captain and engineer were kidnapped in the Wednesday afternoon incident in international waters of the Gulf of Guinea close to Nigeria.
The official says the two kidnapped from the U.S.-flagged ship named C-Retriever were believed taken ashore to Nigeria

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Cholera epidemic in northwest Nigeria infects 536 people, kills 50

KANO, Nigeria — Officials say an outbreak of cholera in Nigeria’s northwest Zamfara state has infected 536 people and killed 50 in the past week.
Medical director of the state hospital, Dr. Labaran Anka, blamed contaminated water in rural areas that have no clean running water. Villagers rely on handmade ponds where animals and people share water.
Anka said more than 420 patients have been treated and discharged since the first victims arrived Friday.
Medical authorities also have reported a cholera outbreak that had killed eight people by Monday in a village of central Plateau state overcrowded with refugees from communal violence.
Cholera is caused by filth and dirty water. U.N. figures indicate half of Nigeria’s 160 million people do not have safe water and a third do not have proper sanitation.
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Heineken issues profit warning on woes in Russia, Brazil, Mexico and Nigeria

AMSTERDAM — Dutch brewer Heineken NV issued a profit warning Wednesday, saying business was worse than expected in developing markets and the economic recovery in industrial nations was weak.
The world’s third-largest brewer now expects full year “underlying earnings,” which strip out the effects of acquisitions, to be lower than they were in 2012, whereas it had previous said they would be “broadly in line.”
The company also reported a 15 percent fall in actual earnings for the third quarter, with net profit dropping to 483 million euros ($665 million) from 568 million in the same period a year ago, in part because of the stronger euro.
Heineken’s share price fell by 5.5 percent to 49.93 euros in Amsterdam.
CEO Jean-Francois van Boxmeer said the company will respond by expanding its cost-cutting programs.
“We didn’t expect such negative development in central and eastern Europe,” he said on a conference call with analysts, noting that the Russian market may shrink by as much as 10 percent.
“Secondly, we were expecting better in key developing markets like Mexico and Nigeria,” Van Boxmeer said. He also put Brazil in that category, saying Heineken had expected beer markets to reflect economic growth that has so far failed to materialize.
The company’s third quarter trading update also showed revenues, including acquisitions, rose 4 percent to 5.18 billion euros during the period. However, they grew just 0.2 percent without the impact of acquisitions, as price hikes of 3.4 percent outweighed a 3.2 percent fall in volumes across the company.
“Volumes and sales in the third quarter were lower than expected as Heineken continues to face challenging market conditions in emerging markets,” said SNS Securities analyst Richard Withagen in a note.
Withagen repeated a “Reduce” rating on the shares.

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Tuesday, October 22, 2013

10 Psychological Studies That Will Change What You Think You Know About Yourself

Why do we do the things we do? Despite our best attempts to "know thyself," the truth is that we often know astonishingly little about our own minds, and even less about the way others think. As Charles Dickens once put it, “A wonderful fact to reflect upon, that every human creature is constituted to be that profound secret and mystery to every other.”
Psychologists have long sought insights into how we perceive the world and what motivates our behavior, and they've made enormous strides in lifting that veil of mystery. Aside from providing fodder for stimulating cocktail-party conversations, some of the most famous psychological experiments of the past century reveal universal and often surprising truths about human nature. Here are 10 classic psychological studies that may change the way you understand yourself.
We all have some capacity for evil.
prison bars
Arguably the most famous experiment in the history of psychology, the 1971 Stanford prison study put a microscope on how social situations can affect human behavior. The researchers, led by psychologist Philip Zimbardo, set up a mock prison in the basement of the Stanford psych building and selected 24 undergraduates (who had no criminal record and were deemed psychologically healthy) to act as prisoners and guards. Researchers then observed the prisoners (who had to stay in the cells 24 hours a day) and guards (who shared eight-hour shifts) using hidden cameras.
The experiment, which was scheduled to last for two weeks, had to be cut short after just six days due to the guards' abusive behavior -- in some cases they even inflicted psychological torture -- and the extreme emotional stress and anxiety exhibited by the prisoners.
"The guards escalated their aggression against the prisoners, stripping them naked, putting bags over their heads, and then finally had them engage in increasingly humiliating sexual activities," Zimbardo told American Scientist. "After six days I had to end it because it was out of control -- I couldn't really go to sleep at night without worrying what the guards could do to the prisoners."
We don't notice what's right in front of us.
Think you know what's going on around you? You might not be nearly as aware as you think. In 1998, researchers from Harvard and Kent State University targeted pedestrians on a college campus to determine how much people notice about their immediate environments. In the experiment, an actor came up to a pedestrian and asked for directions. While the pedestrian was giving the directions, two men carrying a large wooden door walked between the actor and the pedestrian, completely blocking their view of each other for several seconds. During that time, the actor was replaced by another actor, one of a different height and build, and with a different outfit, haircut and voice. A full half of the participants didn't notice the substitution.
The experiment was one of the first to illustrate the phenomenon of "change blindness," which shows just how selective we are about what we take in from any given visual scene -- and it seems that we rely on memory and pattern-recognition significantly more than we might think.
Delaying gratification is hard -- but we're more successful when we do.
child marshmallows
A famous Stanford experiment from the late 1960s tested preschool children's ability to resist the lure of instant gratification -- and it yielded some powerful insights about willpower and self-discipline. In the experiment, four-year-olds were put in a room by themselves with a marshmallow on a plate in front of them, and told that they could either eat the treat now, or if they waited until the researcher returned 15 minutes later, they could have two marshmallows.
While most of the children said they'd wait, they often struggled to resist and then gave in, eating the treat before the researcher returned, TIME reports. The children who did manage to hold off for the full 15 minutes generally used avoidance tactics, like turning away or covering their eyes. The implications of the children's behavior were significant: Those who were able to delay gratification were much less likely to be obese, or to have drug addiction or behavioral problems by the time they were teenagers, and were more successful later in life.
We can experience deeply conflicting moral impulses.
A famous 1961 study by Yale psychologist Stanley Milgram tested (rather alarmingly) how how far people would go to obey authority figures when asked to harm others, and the intense internal conflict between personal morals and the obligation to obey authority figures.
Milgram wanted to conduct the experiment to provide insight into how Nazi war criminals could have perpetuated unspeakable acts during the Holocaust. To do so, he tested a pair of participants, one deemed the "teacher" and the other deemed the "learner." The teacher was instructed to administer electric shocks to the learner (who was supposedly sitting in another room, but in reality was not being shocked) each time they got questions wrong. Milgram instead played recordings which made it sound like the learner was in pain, and if the "teacher" subject expressed a desire to stop, the experimenter prodded him to go on. During the first experiment, 65 percent of participants administered a painful, final 450-volt shock (labeled "XXX"), although many were visibly stressed and uncomfortable about doing so.
While the study has commonly been seen as a warning of blind obedience to authority, Scientific American recently revisited it, arguing that the results were more suggestive of deep moral conflict.
"Human moral nature includes a propensity to be empathetic, kind and good to our fellow kin and group members, plus an inclination to be xenophobic, cruel and evil to tribal others," journalist Michael Shermer wrote. "The shock experiments reveal not blind obedience but conflicting moral tendencies that lie deep within."
Recently, some commenters have called Milgram's methodology into question, and one critic noted that records of the experiment performed at Yale suggested that 60 percent of participants actually disobeyed orders to administer the highest-dosage shock.
We're easily corrupted by power.
plate of cookies
There's a psychological reason behind the fact that those in power sometimes act towards others with a sense of entitlement and disrespect. A 2003 study published in the journal Psychological Review put students into groups of three to write a short paper together. Two students were instructed to write the paper, while the other was told to evaluate the paper and determine how much each student would be paid. In the middle of their work, a researcher brought in a plate of five cookies. Although generally the last cookie was never eaten, the "boss" almost always ate the fourth cookie -- and ate it sloppily, mouth open.
"When researchers give people power in scientific experiments, they are more likely to physically touch others in potentially inappropriate ways, to flirt in more direct fashion, to make risky choices and gambles, to make first offers in negotiations, to speak their mind, and to eat cookies like the Cookie Monster, with crumbs all over their chins and chests," psychologist Dacher Keltner, one of the study's leaders, wrote in an article for UC Berkeley's Greater Good Science Center.
We seek out loyalty to social groups and are easily drawn to intergroup conflict.
boys summer camp
This classic 1950s social psychology experiment shined a light on the possible psychological basis of why social groups and countries find themselves embroiled in conflict with one another -- and how they can learn to cooperate again.
Study leader Muzafer Sherif took two groups of 11 boys (all age 11) to Robbers Cave State Park in Oklahoma for "summer camp." The groups (named the "Eagles" and the "Rattlers") spent a week apart, having fun together and bonding, with no knowledge of the existence of the other group. When the two groups finally integrated, the boys started calling each other names, and when they started competing in various games, more conflict ensued and eventually the groups refused to eat together. In the next phase of the research, Sherif designed experiments to try to reconcile the boys by having them enjoy leisure activities together (which was unsuccessful) and then having them solve a problem together, which finally began to ease the conflict.
We only need one thing to be happy.
The 75-year Harvard Grant study --one of the most comprehensive longitudinal studies ever conducted -- followed 268 male Harvard undergraduates from the classes of 1938-1940 (now well into their 90s) for 75 years, regularly collecting data on various aspects of their lives. The universal conclusion? Love really is all that matters, at least when it comes to determining long-term happiness and life satisfaction.
The study's longtime director, psychiatrist George Vaillant, told The Huffington Postthat there are two pillars of happiness: "One is love. The other is finding a way of coping with life that does not push love away." For example, one participant began the study with the lowest rating for future stability of all the subjects and he had previously attempted suicide. But at the end of his life, he was one of the happiest. Why? As Vaillant explains, “He spent his life searching for love.”
We thrive when we have strong self-esteem and social status.
oscar statue
Achieving fame and success isn't just an ego boost -- it could also be a key to longevity, according to the notorious Oscar winners study. Researchers from Toronto's Sunnybrook and Women's College Health Sciences Centre found that Academy Award-winning actors and directors tend to live longer than those who were nominated but lost, with winning actors and actresses outliving their losing peers by nearly four years.
"We are not saying that you will live longer if you win an Academy Award," Donald Redelmeier, the lead author of the study, told ABC News. "Or that people should go out and take acting courses. Our main conclusion is simply that social factors are important ... It suggests that an internal sense of self-esteem is an important aspect to health and health care."
We constantly try to justify our experiences so that they make sense to us.
Anyone who's taken a freshman Psych 101 class is familiar with cognitive dissonance, a theory which dictates that human beings have a natural propensity to avoid psychological conflict based on disharmonious or mutually exclusive beliefs. In an often-cited 1959 experiment, psychologist Leon Festinger asked participants to perform a series of dull tasks, like turning pegs in a wooden knob, for an hour. They were then paid either $1 or $20 to tell a "waiting participant" (aka a researcher) that the task was very interesting. Those who were paid $1 to lie rated the tasks as more enjoyable than those who were paid $20. Their conclusion? Those who were paid more felt that they had sufficient justification for having performed the rote task for an hour, but those who were only paid $1 felt the need to justify the time spent (and reduce the level of dissonance between their beliefs and their behavior) by saying that the activity was fun. In other words, we commonly tell ourselves lies to make the world appear a more logical, harmonious place.
We buy into stereotypes in a big way.
old woman shutterstock
Stereotyping various groups of people based on social group, ethnicity or class is something nearly all of us do, even if we make an effort not to -- and it can lead us to draw unfair and potentially damaging conclusions about entire populations. NYU psychologist John Bargh's experiments on "automaticity of social behavior" revealed that we often judge people based on unconscious stereotypes -- and we can't help but act on them. We also tend to buy into stereotypes for social groups that we see ourselves being a part of. In one study, Bargh found that a group of participants who were asked to unscramble words related to old age -- "Florida," "helpless" and "wrinkled" -- walked significantly slower down the hallway after the experiment than the group who unscrambled words unrelated to age. Bargh repeated the findings in two other comparable studies that enforced stereotypes based on race and politeness.
"Stereotypes are categories that have gone too far," Bargh told Psychology Today. "When we use stereotypes, we take in the gender, the age, the color of the skin of the person before us, and our minds respond with messages that say hostile, stupid, slow, weak. Those qualities aren't out there in the environment. They don't reflect reality."
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