The Jerusalem Post

ISIS allegedly beheads Christian captives in Nigeria

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MAIDUGURI/CAIRO (Reuters) – Islamic State released a video purporting to show its members beheading 10 Christian men in Nigeria, saying it was part of a campaign to avenge the deaths of its leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi and its spokesman.

The terrorist group posted the footage on its online Telegram news channel on Thursday, with Arabic captions but no audio.

The video showed men in beige uniforms and black masks lining up behind blindfolde­d captives, then beheading 10 of them and shooting an 11th man.

An earlier video seen by Reuters said the captives had been taken from Maiduguri and Damaturu in Nigeria’s northeaste­rn state of Borno, where terrorists have been fighting for years to set up a separate Islamist state.

In that video, the captives pleaded for the Christian Associatio­n of Nigeria and President

Muhammadu Buhari to save them.

Reuters could not verify the authentici­ty of either video.

In a series of comments on Twitter, Buhari condemned the killings.

“These agents of darkness are enemies of our common humanity and they don’t spare any victim, whether they are Muslims or Christians, and therefore, we shouldn’t let them divide us and turn us against one another,” Buhari wrote.

Islamic State in West Africa Province split from the terrorist group Boko Haram in 2016 and has become the region’s dominant jihadist group. Islamist insurgents have killed about 30,000 people in northern Nigeria in the past decade.

Islamic State leader Baghdadi died during a US military raid in Syria and Muhajir in a separate military operation, both over the same weekend in late October.

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