UK-based Islamic hate preacher was being investigated by the
police starting from May 29, 2014, for sharing a video in which he
praised Boko Haram terrorists for abduction of over 200 girls form GGSS Chibok in Borno State.
* The suspect, Mizanur Rahman; praying Chibok girls as shown in Boko Haram video
In
his video message, the 31-year-old resident of London, Mizanur Rahman,
claimed that violence against infidels (non-Muslims) was ‘not
necessarily a bad thing’.
“People want to make it out as though history began on the day these girls were taken from – sorry I should say these women – were taken from this high school in Nigeria.
“They [Boko Haram] didn’t do to these girls what the Nigerian government had been doing to the Muslims all these years. They didn’t rape anybody. They didn’t torture. They didn’t murder any of these girls,” Daily Mail UK quoted the preacher as saying in the video.
It
was not the first time Rahman expressed support to Boko Haram sect. In
one of his previous interviews to the London Evening Standard he
declared:
“On the one hand people are portraying them [Boko Haram] as crazed lunatics who don’t know anything about Islam or society in general.
“But on the other hand if you actually read their messages they are not trying to destroy society, they are just complaining about the oppression against them and trying to better society.”
Rahman also tagged Boko Haram sect as a group full of good messages.
The
preacher, who attracted the attention of the police, used to be a
follower of another suspected religious bigot, Anjem Choudary.
* Anjem Choudary says Rahman should not be prosecuted for giving a measured response to the crisis
Choudary,
who was also the co-founder of the outlawed Al Muhajiroun organisation
with exiled Omar Bakri Muhammad, said that Rahman was his good-old
friend and he should not be prosecuted for such a statement, which may
be considered as “very measured”.
Choudary added that Rahman said nothing illegal about the sect and the female students, pointed out that based on Boko Haram video,
they were being looked after very well. Despite admitting that
targeting girls and women during war is inappropriate, he referred to
current “extraordinary” situation in Nigeria, which may justify the act
of Boko Haram fighters.
Scotland Yard detectives have already started probing the videos.
It
would be recalled that Boko Haram-linked violence has claimed an
estimated 10,000 lives between 2002 and 2013. The group, which
specialises in bombings, assassinations and abductions, is especially
active in the three North Eastern States of Adamawa, Borno and Yobe. The UN security council imposed sanctions on the group on May 22, 2014.
READ MORE: http://news.naij.com/67389.html
READ MORE: http://news.naij.com/67389.html
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