http://english.aljazeera.net/news/africa/2009/07/2009727134953755877.html

Monday, July 27, 2009 
22:47 Mecca time, 19:47 GMT 


      Deadly Nigeria clashes spread 
     
     
                       
                 
                  Dozens of people were killed when Boko Haram fighters 
attacked a police post in Bauchi state 

           
      At least 60 people have been killed in two days of violent clashes 
between police and Islamist fighters across four states in northern Nigeria, 
police have said.

      Fighting broke out in Yobe, Borno and Kano states on Monday, a day after 
at least 50 people were killed in Bauchi state.

      The fighters belonged to a group known as Boko Haram - which means 
"Western education is sin" in the local Hausa dialect - and have called for a 
nationwide enforcement of sharia (Islamic law).

      Members of the group set a police station ablaze in Potiskum, Yobe state, 
early on Monday and attacked a police station in Maiduguri in Borno state.

      Heavily armed members of the group stormed the town of Gamboru-Ngala in 
Borno, burning a police headquarters, a church and a customs post in the early 
hours of Monday, residents said.

      Police targeted

      Shafiu Mohammed, a local resident, told the AFP news agency that the 
group had overpowered police and customs officers in the town.

            In video 

            Dozens killed in violence in northern Nigeria
           
      "The operation took them two hours. They left around 2:00am (01:00 GMT) 
without facing any resistance," he said.

      Police said a police station was also attacked in Wudil town on the 
outskirts of Kano.

      Baba Mohammed, a Kano police spokesman, said three members of the group 
were killed in the attack and another 33 arrested.

      "An unspecified number of these extremists attacked the police station at 
around 4:00am (03:00 GMT) and injured two officers, but our men repelled them, 
killed three and apprehended 33 of them," he said.

      Boko Haram was founded in 2004, setting up a base dubbed "Afghanistan" in 
the village of Kanamma in Yobe, close to the border with Niger.

      The local Daily Trust newspaper quoted Ustaz Mohammed Yusuf, who is 
purportedly the leader of the group, as saying his followers were ready to die 
to ensure the institution of a strict Islamic society.

      "Democracy and [the] current system of education must be changed, 
otherwise this war that is yet to start would continue for long," he said.

      'Fanatical organisation'

      Ogbonnaya Onovo, the national police chief, on Monday vowed to arrest 
Boko Haram's leaders.

      "This is a fanatical organisation that is anti-government, anti-people. 
We don't know what their aims are yet; we are out to identify and arrest their 
leaders and also destroy their enclaves, wherever they are," he said.

           
           
      Felix Onuah, a freelance journalist in the capital, Abuja, told Al 
Jazeera that the group was largely unknown until now.

      "Suddenly they emerged and it was realised that their influence had 
extended to all of the states in the north," he said.

      Sectarian clashes between Muslims and Christians in Bauchi state in 
February left at least five people dead.

      Muslims attacked Christians and set fire to churches in retaliation for 
the burning of two mosques, which had been blamed on Christians.

      Last November, more than 700 people were killed in Jos, the capital of 
Plateau state, when a political feud over a local election degenerated into 
bloody confrontation between the two religions. 
     


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