Boko Haram Leader Claims God Commands Him To Sell Women

Do we agree with his claims, if not why is there no condemnation from the muslim leaders, clerics and head of states. Is this another example of dastardly people using Allah’s(SWT)
name to promote their political agenda.

) – Fears for the fate of more than 200 Nigerian girls turned even more nightmarish Monday when the leader of the Islamist militant group that kidnapped them announced plans to sell them.“I abducted your girls. I will sell them in the market, by Allah,” a man claiming to be Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau said in a video first obtained by Agence France-Presse.
“There is a market for selling humans. Allah says I should sell. He commands me to sell. I will sell women. I sell women,” he continued, according to a CNN translation from the local Hausa language.
Boko Haram is a terrorist group receiving training from al Qaeda affiliates, according to U.S. officials. Its name means “Western education is sin.” In his nearly hourlong, rambling video, Shekau repeatedly called for Western education to end.

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Protesters in a “million-woman march” on Wednesday, April 30, in the Nigerian capital, Abuja, highlight the government’s failure to rescue scores of girls who were kidnapped from their school in Chibok in mid-April. Militants seized about 230 girls in the dead of night at a high school in the nation’s far northeast, a hotbed for Islamist group Boko Haram.

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Obiageli Ezekwesili, former Nigerian education minister and vice president of the World Bank’s Africa division, leads a march of women and mothers of the kidnapped girls in Abuja on April 30.

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A woman cries out during a demonstration April 29 in Abuja with other mothers whose daughters have been kidnapped.

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Mothers weep during a meeting with the Borno state governor on April 22 in Chibok.

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Four female students who were abducted by gunmen and reunited with their families walk in Chibok on April 21. “A total of 230 parents registered the names of their daughters who were missing on the day of the kidnap,” said Asabe Kwambura, principal of the Government Girls Secondary School. “From my records, 43 girls have so far escaped on their own from their kidnappers. We still have 187 girls missing.”

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Borno state governor Kashim Shettima, center, visits the Chibok school on April 21.

Nigerians protest over kidnapped schoolgirls
Nigerians protest over kidnapped schoolgirls
Nigerians protest over kidnapped schoolgirls
Nigerians protest over kidnapped schoolgirls
Nigerians protest over kidnapped schoolgirls
Nigerians protest over kidnapped schoolgirls
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Nigerians protest over kidnapped schoolgirls

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A video of Abubakar Shekau, who claims to be the leader of the Nigerian Islamist extremist group Boko Haram, is shown on September 25, 2013. Boko Haram is an Islamist militant group waging a campaign of violence in northern Nigeria. The group’s ambitions range from the stricter enforcement of Sharia law to the total destruction of the Nigerian state and its government. Click through to see recent bloody incidents in this strife-torn West African nation:

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Bodies lie in the streets in Maiduguri after religious clashes in northern Nigeria, on July 31, 2009. Boko Haram exploded onto the national scene in 2009 when 700 people were killed in widespread clashes across the north between the group and the Nigerian military.

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An unidentified official displays burned equipment inside a prison in Bauchi on September 9, 2010, after the prison was attacked by suspected members of Boko Haram on September 7. About 720 inmates escaped during the prison break, and police suspect the prison was attacked because it was holding 80 members of the sect.

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Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan, second from left, stands on the back of a vehicle after being sworn-in as President during a ceremony in the capital of Abuja on May 29, 2011. In December 2011, Jonathan declared a state of emergency in parts of the country afflicted by violence from the militant Islamist group.

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Rescue workers evacuate a wounded person from a U.N. building in Abuja on August 26, 2011. The building was rocked by a bomb that killed at least 23 people, leaving others trapped and causing heavy damage. Boko Haram had claimed responsibility for the attack in which a Honda packed with explosives rammed into the U.N. building, shattering windows and setting the place afire.

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A photo taken on November 6, 2011, shows state police headquarters burned by a series of bomb and gun attacks that targeted police stations, mosques and churches in Damaturu on November 4, 2011. Attackers left scores injured – probably more than 100 – in a three-hour rampage in the Yobe state city of Damaturu. Sixty-three people died.

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Men look at the wreckage of a car after a bomb blast at St. Theresa Catholic Church outside Abuja on December 25, 2011. A string of bombs struck churches in five Nigerian cities, leaving dozens dead and wounded on the Christmas holiday, authorities and witnesses said. Boko Haram’s targets included police outposts and churches as well as places associated with “Western influence.”

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A paramedic helps a young man injured during one of the multiple explosions and shooting attacks as he leaves a hospital in the northern city of Kano on January 21, 2012. A spate of bombings and shootings left more than 200 people dead in Nigeria’s second-largest city. Three days later, a joint military task force in Nigeria arrested 158 suspected members of Boko Haram.

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A photo taken on June 18, 2012, shows a car vandalized after three church bombings and retaliatory attacks in northern Nigeria killed at least 50 people on June 17 and injured more than 130 others, the Nigerian Red Cross Society said.

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A French family kidnapped on February 19, 2013, in northern Cameroon is released after two months in captivity in Nigeria. The family of four children, their parents and an uncle were kidnapped in Waza National Park in northern Cameroon, situated near the border with Nigeria. One of the captive men read a statement demanding that Nigeria and Cameroon free jailed members of Boko Haram.

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A soldier stands in front of a damaged wall and the body of a prison officer killed during an attack on a prison in the northeastern town of Bama on May 7, 2013. Two soldiers were killed during coordinated attacks on multiple targets. Nigeria’s military says more than 100 Boko Haram militants carried out the attack.

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A deserted student hostel on August 6, 2013, is shown after gunmen stormed a school in Yobe state, killing 20 students and a teacher, state media reported on July 6, 2013. Boko Haram regularly carries out attacks in Yobe, in Nigeria’s northeast.

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A photograph made available by the Nigerian army on August 13, 2013, shows improvised explosive devices, bomb making materials and detonators seized from a Boko Haram hideout. Gunmen attacked a mosque in Nigeria with automatic weapons on August 11, 2013, killing at least 44 people.

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Nigerian students from Jos Polytechnic walk on campus in Jos, Nigeria, on September 30, 2013. Under the cover of darkness, gunmen approached a college dormitory in a rural Nigerian town and opened fire on students who were sleeping. At least 40 students died, according to the News Agency of Nigeria.

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Soldiers stand outside the 79 Composite Group Air Force base that was attacked earlier in Maiduguri on December 2, 2013. Hundreds of Boko Haram militants attacked an Air Force base and a military checkpoint, according to government officials.

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Former hostage and French Catholic Priest Georges Vandenbeusch speaks to reporters outside Paris, France, on January 1, after his release. Vandenbeusch was snatched from his parish church in Cameroon on November 13, 2013. Boko Haram claimed responsibility for kidnapping the priest.

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A man receives treatment at Konduga specialist hospital after a gruesome attack on January 26. It’s suspected that Boko Haram militants opened fire on a village market and torched homes in the village of Kawuri in Borno state, killing at least 45 people.

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Police officers stand guard in front of the burned remains of homes and businesses in the village of Konduga, in northeastern Nigeria, on February 12. Suspected Boko Haram militants torched houses in the village, killing at least 23 people, according to the governor of Borno state on February 11.

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Ibrahim Gaidam, governor of Yobe state, left, looks at the bodies of students inside an ambulance outside a mosque in Damaturu. At least 29 students died in an attack on a federal college in Buni Yadi, near the the capital of Yobe state, Nigeria’s military said on February 26. Authorities suspect Boko Haram carried out the assault in which several buildings were also torched. In April as many as 200 girls were abducted from their boarding school in northeastern Nigeria by heavily armed Boko Haram Islamists who arrived in trucks, vans and buses, officials and witnesses said. The group has recently stepped up attacks in the region, and its leader released a video last month threatening to kidnap girls from schools.

Boko Haram: Nigeria’s crisis
Boko Haram: Nigeria’s crisis
Boko Haram: Nigeria’s crisis
Boko Haram: Nigeria’s crisis
Boko Haram: Nigeria’s crisis
Boko Haram: Nigeria’s crisis
Boko Haram: Nigeria’s crisis
Boko Haram: Nigeria’s crisis
Boko Haram: Nigeria’s crisis
Boko Haram: Nigeria’s crisis
Boko Haram: Nigeria’s crisis
Boko Haram: Nigeria’s crisis
Boko Haram: Nigeria’s crisis
Boko Haram: Nigeria’s crisis
Boko Haram: Nigeria’s crisis
Boko Haram: Nigeria’s crisis
Boko Haram: Nigeria’s crisis
Boko Haram: Nigeria’s crisis
Boko Haram: Nigeria’s crisis
Boko Haram: Nigeria’s crisis
Boko Haram: Nigeria’s crisis
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Boko Haram: Nigeria’s crisis

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Call to #bringbackourgirls in Nigeria
“Girls, you should go and get married,” he said.
The outrageous threat means the girls’ parents’ worst fears could be realized. Parents have avoided speaking to the media for fear their daughters may be singled out for reprisals.
U.S. State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf said the video “does appear legitimate.”
The tape won’t intimidate or deter Nigeria from efforts to save the kidnapped girls, the Nigerian government said.
“It is disheartening that someone would make such a terrible boast,” Doyin Okupe, spokesman for President Goodluck Jonathan, said in an interview with CNN.
“It is to be expected of terrorists,” he added. “No group can affect our resolve. We will see this through to the end. We have the commitment and capacity to get this done. No matter what this takes, we will get these girls.”
On Sunday,Jonathan vowed, “Wherever these girls are, we’ll get them out.”
But he also criticized the girls’ parents, saying they weren’t cooperating fully with police.
“What we request is maximum cooperation from the guardians and the parents of these girls. Because up to this time, they have not been able to come clearly, to give the police clear identity of the girls that have yet to return,” he said.
Nigeria’s finance minister responds to criticism
Weeks after the girls’ April 14 kidnapping, Africa’s most populous country seems to be no closer to finding them, triggering complaints of ineptitude – some of which are expressed on Twitter with the globally trending hashtag #BringBackOurGirls.
Nigeria’s finance minister said Monday that her country’s government remains committed to finding the girls, but should have done a better job explaining the situation to the public.
“Have we communicated what is being done properly? The answer is no, that people did not have enough information,” Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala told CNN’s Richard Quest.
Revealing details about the investigation is tricky, she said, “because you are dealing with people that you don’t know, and you don’t know…what they might do to these girls.”
On Sunday, about 100 demonstrators gathered outside the Nigerian High Commission in London, chanting, “Bring them back!” and “Not for sale!”
Crowds from Los Angeles to London rallied Saturday as well.
“We need to take ownership as if this happened in Chicago or this happened in Washington, D.C. We need to be talking about this,” Nicole Lee, outgoing president of the TransAfrica Forum, told CNN’s “The Lead with Jake Tapper.”
“I think people are doing that. It’s catching fire.”
Former U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton weighed in on Twitter over the weekend.
“Access to education is a basic right & an unconscionable reason to target innocent girls,” she wrote Sunday. “We must stand up to terrorism. #BringBackOurGirls.”

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Police: 223 abducted girls still missing

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Jones outraged 200 girls kidnapped
Militants attacked school last month
According to accounts, armed members of Boko Haram overwhelmed security guards at a school last month, pulled the girls out of bed and forced them into trucks. The convoy of trucks then disappeared into the dense forest bordering Cameroon.
On Friday, Nigerian authorities updated the number of girls kidnapped to 276. At least 53 of the girls escaped, leaving 223 in the hands of their captors, police said.
Authorities said the number of missing girls could grow as police fill in spotty school enrollment records.
Families had sent their girls to the rural school in Chibok for a desperately needed education. The northeastern town is part of Borno state, where 72% of primary-age children never attended school, according to the U.S. Embassy in Nigeria.
It’s even worse for girls than boys. “In the North particularly, the gender gap remains particularly wide and the proportion of girls to boys in school ranges from 1 girl to 2 boys to 1 to 3 in some states,” UNICEF says.
Twelve northern states follow Sharia law.
In recent years, Boko Haram has carried out dozens of attacks, killing thousands of people at schools, churches, police stations, government buildings and elsewhere. Targets include Christians, senior Islamic figures critical of Boko Haram and people the group believes are engaged in “un-Islamic” behavior, the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom says.
Boko Haram has gained training in weapons and communications from al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb and al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula in recent years. This helped it move from little-noticed attacks to more spectacular ones, including against Western targets and the Nigerian government, which it seeks to overthrow, U.S. authorities say. In 2011, it carried out an attack with IEDs on the United Nations headquarters in Abuja.
It’s unclear just how big the group is. The U.S. State Department says Boko Haram’s membership estimates “range from the hundreds to a few thousand.” A U.S. government report in December 2011 found that a “consistent lack of reliable reporting on Boko Haram has contributed to the difficulty in assessing its size, makeup, and goals.”
Crisis unfolds as Nigeria hosts World Economic Forum
Though Nigeria has Africa’s largest economy, driven largely by oil, poverty remains widespread: Nearly 62% of the country’s nearly 170 million people live in extreme poverty, according to the CIA World Factbook.
That dichotomy takes center stage this week as a World Economic Forum meeting convenes Wednesday in Nigeria’s capital of Abuja. The country “already plays a crucial role in advancing the continent’s growth; yet it is also emblematic of the challenges of converting natural wealth into solutions that address persistent social challenges,” the World Economic Forum on Africa says on its website.
Okonjo-Iweala, the finance minister, told CNN that Nigeria’s intense efforts to find the girls have nothing to do with the high-profile event.
“We are doing things because we are Nigerians, and we have to solve our own problems. These are our daughters. It’s like it’s my daughter missing. Every single one of those girls is my daughter,” Okonjo-Iweala said. “I wake up in the morning depressed when I know that they have not been brought back home. The President wakes up depressed, because he came from a poor family, and without education he would never been where he is today.”
Nigerian authorities, she said, are doing everything possible to find the girls – and they’re asking for help.
“Any international organization, any country that has different technology, ways of detecting, please let them help us to get these girls back,” she said.
The United States is sharing intelligence with Nigeria to help in the search, according to a U.S. official with direct knowledge of the situation.
“We are sharing intelligence that may be relevant to this situation. You are going to see a focus on this in all three channels of government: diplomatic, intelligence and military,” the official said, speaking on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitive nature of the information.
Police vs. protesters?
Police in Abuja denied having arrested a leader of a protest over the weekend that was critical of the Nigerian government’s efforts. In a statement, police said they “invited” Nyadar Naomi Mutah, a native of Chibok, for a “fact-finding interview.” She cooperated and “was immediately allowed to return home to her loved ones,” police said.
But Aminu Mahmoud, a lawyer representing Mutah, said her client was arrested Sunday without charge.
Fellow protest organizer Hadiza Usman said that during a session called by first lady Patience Jonathan to meet with protesters, the first lady recognized Mutah and said “let’s keep you aside for now.”
It was not clear whether that had anything to do with Mutah’s later going to the police station.
In its statement on the matter, Abuja police also said security agencies “are leaving no stone unturned” in an attempt to ensure that the children are rescued.

Re: Boko Haram Leader Claims God Commands Him To Sell Women

Woah wth

Re: Boko Haram Leader Claims God Commands Him To Sell Women

Re: Boko Haram Leader Claims God Commands Him To Sell Women

very tragic. cant imagine what those poor girls and their families must be going through.

Re: Boko Haram Leader Claims God Commands Him To Sell Women

I think such topics should be in Religion Section, so that we could get views of our brothers there who have remarkable ability to defend absolutely anything in the name of religion with a straight face.

Re: Boko Haram Leader Claims God Commands Him To Sell Women

Was shocked when I saw this on the news..
So the idiots think western education is haram but kidnapping girls then selling + raping them isn’t? :confused:

Re: Boko Haram Leader Claims God Commands Him To Sell Women

such sick people.

Re: Boko Haram Leader Claims God Commands Him To Sell Women

You would be one of those brothers who has a remarkable ability to defend his views in the name of religion. So lets not defame others just because they hold a different point of view.

As for the topic itself, these guys are doing Islam no service at all by terrorizing countless families of civilians. They need to learn the deen before embarking on acting on whims, and whispers of hamzatushaytan. To show their bravado they should enlist in the Army, if waging war is what they so keenly desire, but to kidnap civilians who are mere victims is worthy of the highest type of condemnation. Islam is about justice, and fairness even if that means you have to stand with the victim against your own blood relatives.

May Allah guide them, and us all.

Re: Boko Haram Leader Claims God Commands Him To Sell Women

Should have been headline news worldwide when it first happened.. As others have pointed out if this had been in the West it would have been the lead story..

Like you said Bella can’t imagine what those poor girls and their families must be going through..

Re: Boko Haram Leader Claims God Commands Him To Sell Women

They are cruel and barbaric people & are using Islam to justify their criminal activity. Problem is people follow these barbarians b/c this is all done in name of religion. These people are no different than TTP and Afghan Taliban, but people still defend them including many resident mullahs on this forum.

Re: Boko Haram Leader Claims God Commands Him To Sell Women

The reason many resident mullahs (not only on this forum, but in real life as well) defend them is that they don’t actually have to live among them. It’s quite easy to defend the indefensible from the comfort of your home, while (most likely) living in a western country with all of the comforts.

Re: Boko Haram Leader Claims God Commands Him To Sell Women

Having lived in Nigeria for several years, let me tell you what the so-called Muslims of the rural parts of this West African country are all about. They are the true “jahilayah,” who have no education of Islam whatsoever. They carry generations of ignorance and barbarism in their culture and live like animals. What they are doing here is another act of barbarism. And then on top of that, we’re dealing with the Nigerian Government which makes our Indian and Pakistani government look like heaven-sent. This is where America should actually go in and show brute force, rescue the girls and blow up the camp and other such camps in the name of war of terror.

Re: Boko Haram Leader Claims God Commands Him To Sell Women

What a nonsense.

Shame to see people using name of islam for such stupic activities , may ALLAH give them hidayat or just destroy them.

Prayers for safe return of these girls.

Re: Boko Haram Leader Claims God Commands Him To Sell Women

These Boko Haram are a proof that there are those who consider slavery a part of shariat. Their counterparts in Afghanistan and Pakistan have also been killing and raping people getting justifications from their distorted version of Islam.

Re: Boko Haram Leader Claims God Commands Him To Sell Women

And than we wonder why muslims and Islam have such bad name in the world now a days. It is because of such pathetic people who do their evil things in the name of Islam. Probably Taliban will be proud of them.

Re: Boko Haram Leader Claims God Commands Him To Sell Women

i researched a bit more on them, they are involved in black magic and similar stuff. may ALLAH guide them or destroy them

Re: Boko Haram Leader Claims God Commands Him To Sell Women

Can you share the link? Because I did not see black magic associated with them.

Re: Boko Haram Leader Claims God Commands Him To Sell Women

Islam never abandoned slavery though it was discouraged. Left open loopholes will always allow evil people to abuse the law/system. It’s about time Muslim leaders around the world collectively condemned slavery. It should be declared Haram. We should not be looking for excuses to make it acceptable just because it wasn’t completely abandoned by the prophet. Stop looking for any goodness in enslaving people. And yes, I have seen people justify slavery many times here on GS. I don’t get it.

Re: Boko Haram Leader Claims God Commands Him To Sell Women

Boko Haram lol funny name

Re: Boko Haram Leader Claims God Commands Him To Sell Women

Once US steps in, you’ll see a storm on social media esp by Pakistanis screaming how it was already planned and a big CONSPIRACY by Americans to steal the resources and all that. Already seeing memes how US/Obama is worse than bokoharam. All what is happening in Nigeria is really sad and ironic that they are using the name of a religion who gave the most respect to females at a time when noone was ready to recognize them.