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Thursday, 9 August 2012

Muslim Terrorists Tell Nigeria's Christian President: 'Convert or Resign'

Boko Haram is demanding that Nigeria's Christian president convert to
Islam or resign, a stance that again calls into question the Obama
administration's playing down of religion as the primary motivation
for the radical group.

WASHINGTON,DC (CNSNews.com) - Boko Haram is demanding that Nigeria's
Christian president convert to Islam or resign, a stance that again
calls into question the Obama administration's playing down of
religion as the primary motivation for the radical group.


In an online video clip released over the weekend, Boko Haram leader
Abubakar Shekau told President Goodluck Jonathan to "repent and
forsake Christianity."

The News Agency of Nigeria said Shekau, speaking in Hausa, said the
president should convert or resign if he wanted Boko Haram to end its
violent campaign.

Presidential spokesman Reuben Abati dismissed the demand as attempted
"blackmail."

"When Nigerians voted overwhelmingly for President Jonathan in the
2011 general election, they knew they were voting for a Christian," he
told reporters in the federal capital, Abuja.

"He has the mandate of Nigerians to serve his fatherland. Nobody
should imagine that he will succumb to blackmail."

Inviting an enemy to convert to Islam or face the consequences is a
longstanding tradition in Islam, modeled on the example set by the
religion's

A hadith (the writings and sayings of the prophet) by Sahih al-Bukhari
quotes Mohammed as saying, "I have been ordered (by Allah) to fight
against the people until they testify that none has the right to be
worshipped but Allah and that Muhammad is Allah's Apostle, and offer
the prayers perfectly and give the obligatory charity, so if they
perform a that, then they save their lives an property from me except
for Islamic laws and then their reckoning (accounts) will be done by
Allah."

(In 2006, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad sent President Bush a
letter interpreted by some scholars as incorporating an invitation to
embrace Islam. He urged Bush to make "a genuine return to the
teachings of prophets, to monotheism and justice, to preserve human
dignity and obedience to the Almighty and his prophets." Reporting on
the letter at the time, Iran's hardline Siasat-e Rooz daily said, "It
has been the prophet's way to invite the infidel leaders to the right
way.")

Boko Haram has claimed responsibility for dozens of deadly bombings
and other attacks, mostly targeting Christians in northern parts of
Africa's most populous country. It has vowed to cleanse northern
Nigeria of Christians.

Declared goals of the group, whose name roughly translates "Western
education is forbidden," include banning non-Islamic education and
extending shari'a (Islamic law) - currently implemented in 12 northern
states - across the entire country, 40 percent of whose people are
Christians.

Despite its increasingly bloody campaign, the Obama administration so
far has resisted calls by U.S. lawmakers to designate Boko Haram as a
foreign terrorist organization (FTO) under American law.

In June it did list Shekau and two other Boko Haram individuals, as
"specially designated global terrorists" (SDGTs) under an executive
order designed to disrupt funding to terrorists.

But Republican lawmakers Rep. Peter King (R-N.Y.), chairman of the
Homeland Security Committee, and Rep. Patrick Meehan (R-Pa.), chairman
of the committee's counterterrorism and intelligence subcommittee,
said the step was "insufficient." They reiterated their earlier calls
for FTO designation, pointing to a report released by the committee
last November investigating the group as a potential threat to the
U.S. homeland.

Asked at the time of the SDGT designation about the FTO issue, State
Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said the administration was
"continuing to look at the question of a broader designation."

"But as you know, Boko Haram is at the moment a loosely constructed
group attached to trying to address grievances in the north. There are
different views within the group, and we're continuing to look at
that."

Despite Boko Haram's open targeting of Christians and its declared
religious goals - after a recent armed raid on a Christian village the
group warned that Christians "will not know peace again" if they do
not accept Islam - Nuland is not alone in underlining the notion that
Boko Haram is driven primarily by "grievances."

Testifying before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee last March,
assistant secretary of state for African affairs Johnnie Carson said
religion was "not the primary driver behind extremist violence in
Nigeria." Boko Haram, he said, "attempts to exploit the legitimate
grievances of northern populations to garner recruits and public
sympathy."

Although Carson acknowledged "reports of contact and growing
relationships between elements of Boko Haram and other extremists in
Africa, including al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb," he said the
group's main focus was to discredit the Nigerian

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