Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau vowed to disrupt the general
election in a new video released on Tuesday, after two suicide attacks in the
northeast blamed on the Islamists killed 38 people.
"This election will not be held even if we are dead. Even if
we are not alive Allah will never allow you to do it," Shekau said in the
Hausa language, presumably referring to the polls scheduled for 28 March.
The video appeared to be the first message released by the group
on Twitter, a sign of its changing media tactics after previous messages were
distributed to journalists on DVD.
Shekau was shown in unusual clarity in front of a solid blue
background, dressed in black and with an automatic weapon resting to his right.
He also
claimed a weekend attack in the northeast Nigerian city of Gombe, which the
military says was repelled.
The
Islamist leader, declared a global terrorist by the United States and
sanctioned by the United Nations, disputed the military's account of the Gombe
clashes, claiming that his fighters overran troops and freed insurgents from
prison.
Nigeria's
general election had been scheduled for 14 February but was postponed by six
weeks, with the security services saying they needed more time to contain the
violence in the northeast, Boko Haram's stronghold.
Despite
Shekau's threat, experts doubt that the Islamist rebels have the capacity to
disrupt voting nationwide, although election officials have conceded that
voting could prove impossible in parts of the northeast.
AFP

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