A Message to the Unbelievers’ Leaders

2018 ◽  
pp. 393-396
Author(s):  
Abubakar Shekau

(17 FEBRUARY 2015) [Trans.: Abdulbasit Kassim] Available at: http://jihadology.net/2015/02/17/al-urwah-al-wuthqa-foundation-presents-a-new-video-message-from-jamaat-ahl-al-sunnah-li-l-dawah-wa-l-jihads-boko-%e1%b8%a5aram-abu-bakr-shekau-a-message-to-the-leader/ This video follows the high point of Boko Haram’s territorial control, and was issued shortly after its second major assault upon the Borno capital of Maiduguri on 1 February 2015. Shekau here threatens the upcoming Nigerian presidential elections, scheduled for 14 February. In the event, they were not held on time, but postponed because of the large territory controlled by Boko Haram. Already, however, the Nigerian army was beginning to roll back Boko Haram by the time this was issued, and had recaptured the town of Monguno, close to Maiduguri. Boko Haram was also overextending itself by attacking Chad overtly for the first time on 13 February. This video is also unique for the fact that it was the first video of Shekau produced under the media agency al-‘Urwa al-Wuthqā, which signaled the unification of Boko Haram’s factions prior to the pledge of allegiance to the Islamic State...

2018 ◽  
pp. 437-440
Author(s):  
Wilāyat Gharb Ifriqiyā

(31 MARCH 2016) [Trans.: Abdulbasit Kassim] Available at: http://jihadology.net/2016/03/31/new-video-message-from-the-islamic-state-investigate-wilayat-gharb-ifriqiyyah/ This video was released a week after text 69, which was erroneously interpreted as signs of weakness and defeat on ISWAP’s part. In this video, the speaker, making a first-time appearance, spoke of the resilience of the members of his group in the face of the campaign by the coalition forces. He also attempted to disprove the media reports that the group had been defeated, saying this is a false victory proclamation contrary to the reality on the battleground. He further threatened those who fight against the group, and specifically mentioned the Nigerian President Buhari. It is noteworthy that the speaker identified Shekau as the leader of the group, and reaffirmed the group’s allegiance to the Islamic State. This video goes a long way to prove that although the coalition forces might have technically defeated Boko Haram or ISWAP, the group does not see itself as being defeated...


Author(s):  
Virginia Comolli

This chapter briefly charts the emerge of the violent Islamist group Boko Haram in Nigeria before detailing its international connections and interactions with Al-Qaeda and, more significantly, Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM). It goes on to discuss the group’s successful attempts at territorial control in the north east and its leader’s ambition to establish an Islamic state. The text explains how the Nigerians converged with ISIS, pledged allegiance to Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi and rebranded Boko Haram as Islamic State West African Province (ISWAP). This is complemented by an analysis of the practical manifestations of this allegiance, the remaining differences between ISWAP and ISIL/ISIS, and the possibly opportunistic reasons that may have motivated this move and that, in the future, could make the Nigerian outfit look elsewhere for more productive partnerships.


Author(s):  
Gerald Tapuka

For the first time in the history of Cameroon, it is facing a conflict that can be compared to no other one. The Boko Haram conflict has not just posed so much difficulty to the population and the government but especially media men and women who are always looking for information to feed the public. It is further complicated because journalists in Cameroon do not have a mastery of Peace Journalism, or conflict sensitive journalism or conflict management and resolution. In this light, they have all dived into the matter with much focus on recounting just the story on the ground, counting the victims and use the war to gain notoriety. They have neither work in favor of pacific resolution of the conflict nor promoting alternatives to the use of force but have been either been embedded in the military’s version of the story while depending so much on the official phase of it and on second hand information. This paper argues that in the communication of the Boko Haram conflict the Cameroonian media have proven to follow the official version in its practice of Straight Journalism, War Journalism and Embedded with very little effort in Peace Journalism.


2021 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
pp. 79-94
Author(s):  
Erwin Kartinawati ◽  
Andrik Purwasito

The Indonesian Presidential Elections of 2014 and 2019 indicated the behavioral changes in mass media, especially that of private television. The involvement of media owners in the political arena can influence the content of most journalistic broadcasts. Therefore, this study aims to determine the perception of student voters in Surakarta on media houses with political preferences. This might be because the media owner is actively supporting a political party or a particular candidate. Furthermore, if the media is under the influence of politics, how can voters have trust in the information dissipated, especially during elections. The data obtained for this study was through the distribution of questionnaires to college students aged 17-25 years that are voting for the first time. Most of the respondents stated that their political choices are not necessarily influenced by the media. The belief in the media is not directly related to political preferences but depends on the content or what is conveyed to the public. However, the involvement of media owners in politics also undermines public trust in the content of the media, especially about political news.


2018 ◽  
pp. 429-432
Author(s):  
Man Chari

(7 OCTOBER 2015) [Trans.: Abdulbasit Kassim] Available at: http://jihadology.net/2015/10/07/new-video-message-from-the-islamic-state-messages-from-the-soldiers-of-the-caliphate-in-wilayat-gharb-ifriqiyyah/ Following the declaration of bay‘a (allegiance) by Shekau to Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi (text 62), this video is the bay‘a of the members of the group to the Islamic State, following the pattern of bay‘a of other Islamic State provinces (placing each other’s hands around the speaker and repeating the pledge of allegiance to the Islamic State after the speaker). The bilingualism of this video reflects the growing unity between Boko Haram and the Islamic State. The Arabic version cites the complete Qur’ānic verses, whereas in the Hausa version they are paraphrased...


Author(s):  
Virginia Comolli

The chapter explores Boko Haram’s regional expansion and links to international jihadi movements such as al-Qaeda in the Maghreb (AQIM) and the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS). The chapter highlights how the move beyond Nigeria’s borders is unlikely to have been driven by genuine international or pan-Islamic ambitions but, instead opportunism and the pursuit of its domestic agenda had been at the core of Boko Haram’s interaction with AQIM first and the pledge of allegiance to ISIS later. The chapter also reflects on the repercussions of the insurgency campaign beyond Nigerian borders and the regional dimension of the resulting humanitarian crisis. Responses to such challenges have translated into international efforts to what, however, remains a localized phenomenon.


2018 ◽  
pp. 435-436
Author(s):  
David Cook

(22 MARCH 2016) [Trans.: Abdulbasit Kassim] Available at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HWzhr7dOyrk After a half-year’s hiatus, Shekau reemerged in a video which was erroneously interpreted by the Nigerian media as a call from him to end the group’s campaign and embrace peace. As the translation below shows, there is nothing in the video that suggests surrender or an end to the violence. Rather, Shekau was simply acknowledging that he received messages from his followers, while extending greetings to them and encouraging them to be steadfast. There are some reasons to doubt the authenticity of this video. First, unlike other videos of Boko Haram (after it became ISWAP), this video was posted on YouTube. Second, the poor quality of this video stands out amidst the upgrade in Boko Haram’s video quality. This video shares more features with Boko Haram videos from the period 2010–14. Third, Shekau also refers to himself as the leader of JASDJ, a title defunct after the group’s amalgamation with the Islamic State, and Shekau’s becoming emir of Islamic State West African Province. Fourth, the soft-spoken style of Shekau’s delivery in this video is quite different from his bombastic and taunting style in past videos. The doubts surrounding the release of this video were laid to rest when the video was countered almost immediately by another video produced by the media department of ISWAP (see text 70)...


Author(s):  
Ben-Collins Emeka Ndinojuo

Terrorism has become a recurrent feature in news headlines in both national and international news organisations. The Boko Haram group has become the foremost terrorist organisation in Nigeria and was labeled as the deadliest terrorist organisation by Global Terrorism Index of 2016 with over 6000 deaths to their name in 2015 alone. The United Nations recently released a report that over 5 million displaced persons by the Boko Haram conflict risk starvation and death in 2017. Their area of operation has expanded from Nigeria into Cameroon, Niger and Chad across sub-Saharan Africa and rumored to spread from Mali, Iraq and Syria with the pledge of allegiance by the Boko Haram Leader to the Islamic State (ISIS). This paper advocates that lack of viable community media organisations that provide information on rural communities may have played a part in the rise of the group. Journalists reporting conflicts are put in a complex situation where their access to conflict zones has been limited thus impacting on the quality of their reporting. The military is enjoined to provide greater access and protection for journalists covering the conflict as accuracy and objectivity are key elements in reporting and resolution of crises.


2008 ◽  
pp. 312-316
Author(s):  
Jacek Leociak

The title of this text, From the Book of Madness and Atrocity, published here for the first time, indicates its generic and stylistic specificity, its fragmentary, incomplete character. It suggests that this text is part of a greater whole, still incomplete, or one that cannot be grasped. In this sense Śreniowski refers to the topos of inexpressibility of the Holocaust experience. The text is reflective in character, full of metaphor, and its modernist style does not shun pathos. Thus we have here meditations emanating a poetic aura, not a report or an account of events. The author emphasises the desperate loneliness of the dying, their solitude, the incommensurability of the ghetto experience and that of the occupation, and the lack of a common fate of the Jews and the Poles (“A Deserted Town in a Living Capital”; “A Town within a Town”; “And the Capital? A Capital, in which the town of a death is dying . . . ? Well, the Capital is living a normal life. Under the occupation, indeed . . . .”).


2016 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 129
Author(s):  
Urtak Hamiti

Barbaric, savage, horrific-these were terms to define the decision of the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) to murder its captured Jordanian pilot by burning him alive inspired a thesaurus of horror and revulsion. The men who did it, the perpetrators were described by the media as mad men, thugs, monsters. To most of the people, the act itself seemed inexplicable and without sense. However, behind the choreographed and videotaped violence lies a calculated horrible cold logic. Although, ISIS is often portrait as a mighty force on the ground in Syria and Iraq, facts state that they control mainly communications between various provinces in both countries, and, as most guerrilla armies, are militarily weak by conventional measure. ISIS has little or almost none defense against the bombing campaign that is facing now, while US has formed a coalition that is confronting them on the ground as well, after President Barack Obama published the “New Security Doctrine” which includes degrading and finally destroying ISIS. ISIS, however, have proven to be very organized in promoting dramatic acts of violence against their enemies and promoting them two achieve two goals: use terror tactics as a psychological weapon against all those facing them and all those that are to face them in combat. Secondly, through usage of social network platforms to promote killings and executions, the aim of ISIS is to encourage recruits from out of Syria and Iraq, and elsewhere, to join them in their cause. Online operations of ISIS fall under a production group called the Al Hayat Media Center. The Center was created to seduce Westerners into joining the ranks of ISIS and also to distribute propaganda through social and media platforms. It is difficult to assess the success of this operation, but solid sources provided by US military and intelligence estimate that at least 300 Americans are fighting in the ranks of ISIS (at least two Americans have been killed fighting for ISIS in Iraq/Syria region) while the number of Europeans is in thousands. The US Response to this psychological kind of warfare came when President Barack Obama established the Center for Strategic Counterterrorism Communications (CSCC) aiming to combat terrorist propaganda. The main strategy of CSCC is not directly to confront ISIS operatives, but rather than that to deal with the people they are trying to recruit. Now, with almost entire international public opinion on their side, it is time for US to more actively respond to ISIS especially in the manner of psychological warfare since it is obvious that operations of “winning hearts and minds” of people in Iraq and Syria are not enough compared to ruthless tactics of ISIS which “winning hearts and minds” by brute force, terror, and vivid violent images. The online propaganda war is a new component to conflicts of 21st century that allows enemies to reach one another’s home fronts directly. ISIS might seem not so strong on the ground but it has captured one fundamental flaw of the media of 21st century-the one that bad news is always good news and that televised violence will always have an audience. ISIS has proclaimed that its goal is to create a caliphate of 21st century but its psychological warfare and propaganda is inspiring individuals throughout the West to commit horrible terrorist crimes. Could this be another mind game set up by ISIS, it remains to be seen. However one thing is for certain, US and its allies must tackle ISIS not only by planes and other military means, but also by a strategy that would eliminate its influence in spreading their propaganda.


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