‘ISIS recruiter’ arrested in northern Nigeria

Chadian soldiers transfer weapons seized from Boko Haram fighters to a helicopter in the Nigerian city of Damasak, Nigeria, Wednesday March 18, 2015.

Chadian soldiers transfer weapons seized from Boko Haram fighters to a helicopter in the Nigerian city of Damasak, Nigeria, Wednesday March 18, 2015.


Nigeria’s intelligence agency on Tuesday said it had arrested a recruiter for the ISIS group, as well as seven alleged members of the Boko Haram offshoot Ansaru.

The announcement came nearly a year after the leader of Boko Haram in northeast Nigeria, Abubakar Shekau, pledged allegiance to ISIS leader in Syria and Iraq, Abu Bakr Al-Baghdadi.

Speculation has been rife since then on whether closer links would be forged between the two groups, with lawless Libya and the remote Sahel region pinpointed as a possible source of contact.

The Department of State Services (DSS) said in an emailed statement that Abdussalam Enesi Yunusa was detained in the northern city of Kano on January 17.

His arrest came after intelligence unveiled “his terrorist antecedents and covert drive to indoctrinate and recruit susceptible youths in the country,” the statement read.

The DSS described Yunusa as a “recruiter for the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS)” and said he was preparing to go to Libya to join an “ISIS terrorist training camp” with at least three others.

The secret police said he told them two other Nigerians were already undergoing training in the north African country, which ISIS has increasingly targeted since the fall of Moamer Khadafi in 2013.

At least two others, including one from Niger, were “ISIS agents operating in Nigeria and the West African sub-region”, funded by an ISIS “media expert” using international money transfers.

Four others were arrested in Kano on January 22 “while migrating to Libya, with their immediate families, including infants, in a bid to join ISIS”, the DSS said.

Two students were arrested a week later, also in Kano, on suspicion of plotting “coordinated lone wolf attacks” on crowded civilian targets in Nigeria, it added.

On Ansaru, a Boko Haram splinter group more ideologically aligned to al-Qaeda, the DSS said it arrested seven alleged members in the northern state of Katsina on January 17.

“This group was discovered in an active stage, as its members were already co-ordinating themselves for attacks in Katsina and Kano states, it added.


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