搜索关注在线英语听力室公众号:tingroom,领取免费英语资料大礼包。
(单词翻译)
By Nico ColombantA police official in northern Nigeria says security forces have chased away foreign religious radicals1 outside the main city of Kano, restoring order ahead of Saturday's presidential election. The clashes between security forces and suspected Islamic militants2 follow the killing3 of an influential4 Muslim cleric last week. VOA's Nico Colombant reports from Kano.
Police commissioner5 Atiku Kafur tells VOA army reinforcements helped chase away the several hundred insurgents6 who were lightly armed, spoke7 only Arabic and had holed up in a suburb of Kano. "The military started shelling their strongholds, they succeeded in killing some of them, and arresting some of them; so as I speak now, I can say the area is quiet. They have been seen running away," he said.
On Tuesday, police reported the assailants killed 12 policemen and one civilian8.
Acts of violence have disrupted election process throughout Nigeria (VOA photo - N. Colombant) |
Kafur says he has strong evidence there is a link between the attack and the murder of Sheik Jaafar Adam, an influential Sunni cleric, last week. He says one of his top priorities is to find the killers9. "We are spreading our tentacles10 to various angles, including political, legal, whatever. We will not leave any stone unturned. We will make sure that we get those who killed that Sheikh," he said.
Kano is predominantly Muslim |
Waddah Mohammed, a Kano businessman, says the local residents blame outsiders for trying to disrupt the region ahead of the presidential ballot12. "Whenever you ask, the people did not associate with them, with any of the Islamic sects13 in Kano. And they did not call anybody's name here in Kano. And they say they have only come to face the law enforcement agents so this is what confuses people," he said.
To cut down on violence, police have imposed a nighttime curfew.
In a quiet part of Kano, one motorbike taxi driver, waiting at a repair shop, says he is grateful for the curfew and the extra security. "If people are coming out, they will be fighting with police or some other people, and that this is why they are doing anything around. From 5:30, they are going back to their house and nothing is happening with (because of) the curfew," he said.
Opposition14 parties have called for protests and a boycott15 of Saturday's presidential elections unless last week's gubernatorial ballot that they claim was riddled16 with fraud is annulled17.
But the election commission says the opposition leaders should address their grievances18 in the courts, and says the presidential elections will take place as scheduled.
本文本内容来源于互联网抓取和网友提交,仅供参考,部分栏目没有内容,如果您有更合适的内容,欢迎 点击提交 分享给大家。