Members of the violent Islamic sect, Boko Haram, have instituted the Shara law in Mubi, Adamawa State, captured by the insurgents last week.
The insurgents were also said to have amputated
the hands of 10 residents said to have been found guilty of sundry offences,
including looting of property of fleeing residents.
Sources in Mubi town said they saw the terrorists
parading 10 persons whose hands were said to have been amputated.
The victims were said to been amputated in the
presence of residents the insurgents asked to converge to witness the
enforcement of Sharia law.
An eye witness account indicated that two imams
were dragged out from a mosque and beheaded for allegedly preaching against
Boko Haram. The insurgents also advised all Christians in the Mubi Local
Government Area to relocate to other areas except they were prepared to be
islamised or be killed.
The source further said that the Emir’s palace in
Mubi had been converted to the residence of the ‘Amir’ and that the insurgents
hoisted their flags to signify that they were in control of the palace.
Our correspondent learnt that the most affected
by the development in Mubi were students of the Adamawa State University and
the Federal Polytechnic, Mubi. The students were said to have gone through
torture before some of them reportedly escaped through the border between
Nigeria and Cameroun.
Some of them were said to still be in the bush.
“I must give thanks and praises to God almighty
for spearing my life; I saw as people were being slaughtered like goats. I am
too happy to see myself alive,” a female student of the Federal Polytechnic,
told our correspondent in Yola on Sunday.
The insurgents said their mode of prayer was
different from what Muslims in the town were used to and that they were “in
Mubi to restore Islamic independence to the people and anybody who does not
follow us must be killed.”
“We are not to hurt anyone but to free the people
from religious slavery,” a source quoted the insurgents to have said.
Meanwhile, the Deputy Governor of Borno State,
Alhaji Zanna Mustapha, has said that the Federal Government needs to adopt more
stringent measures against Boko Haram in the North-East.
Mustapha told journalists on Monday at the
Government House, Yola, that the state governments of Adamawa, Borno and Yobe
had raised the alarm over the future of their states as a result of rising
occupation of towns and villages by Boko Haram.
Punch
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