The International Criminal Court and the Nigerian Crisis: An Inquiry into the Boko Haram Ideology and Practices from an Islamic Law Perspective



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(visited 7 October 2013).

59 ‘Nigeria Boko Haram crisis: Emir's palace burnt in Bama’, BBC News Africa, 20February 2014, available at (visited 6 March 2014).

60 Security Council Press Statement on Terrorist Attacks in Nigeria, SC/10507 Afr/2309.

61 ‘Situation in Nigeria’, European Parliament resolution of 4 July 2013 on the situation in Nigeria (2013/2691(RSP)), 8.

62 Rewards for Justice, available online at (visited 7 October 2013).

63 Terrorism Act 2000 (Proscribed Organisations) (Amendment) Order 2013/1746.

64 VO Nmehielle, ‘Sharia Law in the Northern States of Nigeria: To Implement or Not to Implement, the Constitutionality is the Question’ (2004) 26 Human Rights Quarterly 730-759, 736.

65 P Ostien and A Dekker, ‘Sharia and National Law in Nigeria’, in JM Otto (ed), Sharia Incorporated: A Comparative Overview of the Legal Systems of Twelve Muslim Countries in Past and Present, (Leiden University Press, Leiden 2010) 553-612.

66 Ibid, 574.

67 VO Nmehielle, supra n 64, 730-731.

68 AF Akwara and BO Ojomah, ‘Religion, Politics and Democracy in Nigeria’ (2013) 9:2 Canadian Social Science 48-61, 52-55.

69 P Ostien and A Dekker, supra n 65, 574.

70 Section 1(3) Constitution of Nigerian 1999.

71 AF Akwara and BO Ojomah, supra n 68, 52-55.

72 VO Nmehielle, supra n 64, 731-732.

73 P Ostien and A Dekker, supra n 65, 589.

74 Ibid, 589.

75 KN Roberts, ‘Constitutionality of Shari'a Law in Nigeria and the Higher Conviction Rate of Muslim Women under Shari'a Fornication and Adultery Laws’ (2005) 14:2 Southern California Review of Law and Women's Studies 315-336.

76 D Cook, ‘Boko Haram: A Prognosis’, (2011) James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy, Rice University, 1-33, at 22 available online at http://bakerinstitute.org/files/735/, 7.

77 VO Nmehielle, supra n 64, 732.

78 GJ Weimann, supra n 15, 171.

79 P Ostien and A Dekker, supra n 65, 592.

80 See GJ Weimann, supra n 15.

81 P Ostien and A Dekker, supra n 65, 581.

82 Constitution of Nigeria 1999, Article 42.

83 Ibid, Article 34.

84 AM Yawuri, ‘On defending Safiyatu and Amina Lawal’, in P Ostien (ed), Sharia Implementation in Northern Nigeria 1999-2006: A Sourcebook, Vol V (Spectrum Books Limited, Ibadan 2007) 129-139

85 B Maiangwa, ‘Killing in the Name of God? Explaining the Boko Haram Phenomenon in Nigeria’ (2013) 38(1) Journal of Social, Political and Economic Studies 55-79, 65.

86 C Sedikides, ‘Why Does Religiosity Persist?’ (2010) 14(1) Personality and Psychology Review 3-6, 4.

87 Anonymous Author, ‘The Popular Discourses of Salafi Radicalism and Salafi Counter-radicalism in Nigeria: A Case Study of Boko Haram’ (2012) 42(2) Journal of Religion in Africa 118-144, 119, 142. The author here preferred to remain anonymous to avoid violence against them, their colleagues and informants.

88 It should be noted that objectivity, especially in the field of religious studies, is an aim that is very difficult to achieve though still helpful and essential. D Marshall, God, Muhammad and the Unbelievers: A Qur‘ānic Study (Curzon Press, Richmond 1999), 6.

89 DE Agbiboa, ‘Living in Fear: Religious Identity, Relative Deprivation and the Boko Haram Terrorism’ (2013) 6(2) African Security 153-170, 160.

90 For an account of jihād in Ibn Taymiyah’s thought, see Aḥmad Ibn ʽAbd al-Ḥalīm Ibn Taymiyah, Fiqh al-Jihād li-Shaykh al-Islām al-Imām Ibn Taymiyah, ed. Zuhayr Shafīq al-Kabbī (Beirut: Dār al-Fikr al- ʽArabī li al-Ṭibāʽah wa al-Nashr, 1992/1412), 71. See also M Sharif, ‘Jihād in Ibn Taymiyyah’s Thought’ (2005) 493 Islamic Quarterly 183-204.

91 Sayyid Quṭb Ibrāhīm Ḥassan al-Shādhilī, famously known as Sayyid Quṭb, was born in 1906 in a village in Upper Egypt. During his lifetime, Quṭb was arrested and imprisoned three times. During his period of imprisonment, Quṭb is widely believed to have ‘developed a radical approach, rejecting the then state system as illegitimate and “un-Islamic”.’ BHE Zollner, The Muslim Brotherhood: Hasan al-Hudaybi and Ideology (Routledge, London 2009), 3. As a result, some see him as the ideologue of most of the modern terrorist groups, going as far as to include the perpetrators of the 11 September 2001 attacks as well as al-Qaeda and its leader Osama bin Laden. Others see him ‘as a victim of state persecution who developed a theology of liberation in reaction to his maltreatment.’ See, ibid, 2.

92 El-Sayed Amin, Terrorism from a Qur‘ānic Perspective: A Study of Selected Classical and Modern Exegeses and Their Interpretation in the Modern Context (PhD thesis, The University of Birmingham 2010) at 165-169; El-Sayed Amin, Reclaiming Jihad: A Qur‘ānic Critique of Terrorism, (Kube Publishing, UK 2014). See also G Fuller, The Future of Political Islam (Palgrave Macmillan, New York 2003), 52.

93 B Maiangwa, supra n 85, 66-67.

94 A Salkida, ‘Nigeria: Sect Leader Vows Revenge’, available online at
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