In
an unprecedented move, the United States monday posted up to $23 million in
rewards to help track down five leaders of militant groups accused of spreading
terror in West Africa.
The
highest reward of $7 million was offered for the Boko Haram leader Abubakar
Shekau, who last week called on Islamists in Afghanistan, Pakistan and Iraq to
join the bloody fight to create an Islamic state in Nigeria.
The
US State Department's Rewards for Justice Programme also targeted Al-Qaeda in
the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), offering its first ever bounties for wanted
militants in West Africa.
Up
to $5 million was posted for Al-Qaeda veteran Mokhtar Belmokhtar, the one-eyed
Islamist behind the devastating attack on an Algerian gas plant in January in
which 37 foreigners, including three Americans, were killed.
A
further $5 million was offered for top AQIM leader, Yahya Abou Al-Hammam,
reportedly involved in the 2010 murder of an elderly French hostage in Niger.
Malik
Abou Abdelkarim, a senior fighter with AQIM, and Oumar Ould Hamaha, the
spokesman for Mali's Movement for Oneness and Jihad in West Africa (MUJAO),
were also targeted by the rewards programme, which will give up to $3 million
each for information leading to their arrests.
“AQIM
has been increasingly active in north and West Africa. They're one of the
pre-eminent kidnap for ransom groups in the terrorist world right now,” a
senior State Department official told AFP, asking not to be named.
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