Suspected members of the Boko Haram sect have
threatened to kill “infidel” Adeola Akinremi, features editor of THISDAY.
The death threat – conveyed in an email to Akinremi
on May 10 but seen on Tuesday, TheCable reported – was issued after the
journalist, upon travelling to Adamawa state to investigate killings by the
insurgents and the plight of Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs), wrote a piece
titled, Why Boko Haram don’t deserve our amnesty.
“We
have seen your hand against us . Inshallah you will die like other infidels
that we captured,” read the mail, signed by one Abu Musab Abul-Barnawi.
“You
have been joining our enemies. You are made yourself their mouth [sic] but we
will get you insha Allah. This is a holy mission for Allah, so stop writing
against us.
“You’re
going too Michika calling yourself a brave journalist, but you’re a coward. We
will get you. Its your government that talks amnesty, we are not looking for
amnesty. Allah is with us. You’re now a walking dead and a prey to the Lions of
Islam from the bullet of a passing car or a nearby rooftop.
“We
are not asking you to repent, because of your error, we will use your blood to
send warning to others. Those people from America and Europe that are using you
against our mission will soon know the truth. Our wounded fighters will never
give up. they will return to fight for Allah to get their reward. Your soldier
will soon know the truth.”
Since beginning its three-pronged war against the
government, security agencies and religious institutions in 2009, Boko Haram
has killed at least two Nigerian journalists.
In October 2011, gunmen suspected to be members of the
sect shot dead Zakariyya Isa, a reporter with the Nigerian Television Authority
(NTA) in Maiduguri, capital of Borno state, “for working against the interests
of the sect”.
Isa was shot dead around 7:30 pm in front of his
house in Bulunkutu area of the city shortly after leaving the mosque. His
assailants traced him to his house, a few metres from the mosque, before
opening fire on him.
In January 2012, Enenche Akogwu, the Kano state
correspondent of Channels Television, was killed shortly after multiple bomb
blasts at the farm centre police station, Kano. Akogwu was trying to find out
details of the attack from bystanders when suspected members of the sect
emerged, shooting him three times in the chest and another three times in the
stomach.
THISDAY itself has previously been a victim of Boko
Haram attacks. In April 2012, the Abuja and Kaduna offices suffered
simultaneous suicide blasts. The Abuja attack resulted in the death of an
employee, three passersby and the suicide bomber, while the Kaduna blast also
wreaked damage on the offices of Moment and Sun newspapers.
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