Toronto Star

Boko Haram slaughters ‘traitors’ in Nigeria

Eleven accused of deserting extremist group dragged out of homes, then executed

- HARUNA UMAR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

MAIDUGURI, NIGERIA— Boko Haram militants Friday slit the throats of 11 alleged “traitors,” witnesses said in the first news of desertions from the Nigerian Islamic extremist group.

The militants arrived before dawn and went door to door in northeaste­rn Miringa town, said resident Muhammad Kimba.

“They actually dragged out 11 persons to the Eid praying ground outside the town and slaughtere­d all of them,” Kimba said.

It is the fifth attack during a week that left 173 people dead as Boko Haram-Islamist extremists appear to obey an Islamic State group order to step up attacks in the holy month of Ramadan.

Boko Haram became the Islamic State group’s West Africa franchise this year.

On Thursday, a woman and a girl strapped with explosives blew up and killed 13 people at a crowded market and a military checkpoint in Malari village, just outside Maiduguri city, according to security guard Abba Shehu.

“They actually dragged out 11 persons to the Eid praying ground outside the town and slaughtere­d all of them.” MUHAMMAD KIMBA MIRINGA RESIDENT

In the most deadly attack, the militants targeted several mosques in Kukawa town on Wednesday, gunning down nearly 100 praying worshipper­s.

The militants, who want to impose their strict version of sharia, or Islamic law, across Nigeria, often defile mosques where clerics preach against their extremism.

While they have also attacked churches, many more Muslims are among an estimated 13,000 people killed during the six-year-old Islamic uprising. A further1.5 million people have been driven from their homes. Boko Haram took over a large swath of northeaste­rn Nigeria last year and stepped up cross-border raids.

A multinatio­nal army from Nigeria and its neighbours forced the militants out of towns, but bombings and village attacks are increasing. President Muhammadu Buhari condemned the latest attacks, calling them “desperate acts” that underscore the need to speed up full deployment of the multinatio­nal army.

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