Marie Harf |
The U.S. State Department on Wednesday
said Nigeria’s election in February could be a factor behind the sharp
increase in attacks by Boko Haram Islamist militants in the north of the
country.
Spokeswoman Marie Harf
said, however, that the Feb. 14 presidential election should go ahead in
spite of the violence which has forced about 20,000 Nigerians to flee
to neighbouring countries in recent weeks.
“We do believe the election is a factor,’’ Harf told a daily briefing.
Harf said Boko Haram previously used events such as elections to stir up tensions.
However, the election is expected to be a close contest between President Goodluck Jonathan and his leading challenger, Muhammadu Buhari.
“Boko Haram has tended to, particularly
around something like an election, use political issues or sensitivities
to try to en flame tensions.
“We have seen that as one of their
tactics and that is why it is so important to move forward with the
election, because we believe it is important,’’ she noted.
Boko Haram’s insurgency began in 2009,
but the number and scale of the attacks has risen sharply since 2015
after the government imposed emergency rule in three worst-hit states in
northern Nigeria.
Amnesty International has said Boko Haram may have killed some 2,000 people around Jan. 3 in Baga in northern Nigeria.
However, Harf said it was hard to independently verify that figure.
Photo Credit: BBC
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