Nigerian Islamic sect leader killed in detention

MAIDUGURI, Nigeria, (Reuters) – The leader of a  radical Islamic sect in northern Nigeria has been killed in  police detention hours after being captured by the security  forces, a police spokesman said yesterday.

Security forces captured militant preacher Mohammed Yusuf,  whose Boko Haram sect has been responsible for clashes which  have killed more than 180 people in recent days, after a manhunt  involving military helicopters and armed police.

A Reuters reporter saw Yusuf at a military barracks in the  northern city of Maiduguri after his capture. Yusuf had no  visible injuries and was standing up. He was later transferred  to the city’s police headquarters where he died.

“He has been killed. You can come and see his body at the  state police command headquarters,” Isa Azare, spokesman for the  police command in Maiduguri, said.

Army and police earlier battled the remnants of Yusuf’s sect  — which wants a wider adoption of Sharia (Islamic law) across  Africa’s most populous nation — after shelling his compound.

Bursts of gunfire rang out as the security forces went from  door-to-door in Maiduguri, hunting his followers.
The violence erupted when members of the group were arrested  on Sunday in Bauchi state, some 400 km (250 miles) southwest of  Maiduguri, on suspicion of plotting to attack a police station.

Yusuf’s supporters, armed with machetes, knives, home-made  hunting rifles and petrol bombs, then went on the rampage in  several states across northern Nigeria, attacking churches,  police stations, prisons and government buildings.

President Umaru Yar’Adua, on an official visit to Brazil,  spoke by telephone with northern governors and urged traditional  and religious leaders to use Friday prayers to warn people about  the dangers of such sects.

“The president stated that religious groups such as Boko  Haram, which seeks to disrupt the peace and security of the  Nigerian state, should not be the bride of any true Muslim  individual or group,” his spokesman Olusegun Adeniyi said.

Nigeria’s Muslim umbrella group Jama’atu Nasril Islam has  already condemned the violence and backed the security forces.