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Chad president messes with Boko Haram's mind

If Chadian President Idriss Deby is to be believed, Abubakar Shekau, the bearded and bandoliered leader of Islamist militant group Boko Haram, is no more.

A poster advertising for the search of Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau is pasted on a wall in Baga village on the outskirts of Maiduguri, in the north-eastern state of Borno May 13, 2013. REUTERS/Tim Cocks

Given the many previous reports of Shekau's demise, followed soon after by videos of him brandishing automatic weapons and spouting invective against the Nigerian state, analysts and diplomats are treating the claims with caution.

However, two factors are spicing up the normal guessing game that swirls around the leadership of the notoriously opaque group, which has killed thousands of people in its six-year campaign to establish an Islamic caliphate in northeast Nigeria.

First, Shekau - not known for being camera-shy - has not appeared on video for six months, raising the possibility that he has indeed been injured or killed by offensives during that time by Nigerian, Chadian and Cameroonian troops.

And second, Deby has identified a successor.

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Although little is known about the replacement, identified by Deby as Mahamat Daoud, it suggests that even if Shekau is not down and out, he may have a rival for control of an organisation long suspected of being riven by factional divisions.

Besides the battlefield setbacks Boko Haram has suffered, disagreements over whether to entertain negotiations with Abuja or declare allegiance to jihadist groups such as Islamic State in Syria and Iraq are believed to have deepened those rifts.

"Boko Haram has always been something of a constellation of units, with its hardline leadership having only limited control or influence over some fighting units," said Roddy Barclay, senior Africa consultant at Control Risks.

"Regional military pressure is likely to have fragmented militant command structures, though it remains uncertain whether a change in leadership has actually occurred."

The possibility remains that Deby, a wily regional operator who came to power in a 1990 military coup and who has survived several armed attempts to remove him, is trying to engineer internal blood-letting by promoting one faction over another.

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"We have cut off Boko Haram's head," said Deby, who has turned Chad's fight against Boko Haram into a personal duel with Shekau. "I think Boko Haram will be finished by the end of 2015."

The new leader Daoud was open to the idea of talks with Abuja, Deby added.

What little is known about Daoud suggests he and Shekau do not see eye to eye, especially on the issue of the extreme violence that Boko Haram has meted out under Shekau's leadership, diplomats and analysts said.

"It may be a tactic to sow disunity within Boko Haram," one Abuja-based diplomat said. "This man, Daoud, has not been fighting or close to the Shekau group. He's more of a learned cleric."

Nigerian security analyst Fulan Nasrullah concurred, saying he understood Daoud to be around 38 years old and the son of an Arab man and Chadian mother renowned for his Islamic scholarship and loyalty to tenets laid down by sect founder Mohammed Yusuf.

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Yusuf's largely peaceful movement advocating sharia law and Islamic schooling -- Boko Haram means "Western education is forbidden" in the local Hausa language -- turned violent in 2009, and quickly morphed into a full-on insurgency after Yusuf's death in police custody.

Since then, thousands have been killed and more than a million displaced by the militants who at the start of this year controlled an area the size of Belgium. Much of that territory has since been retaken by Chadian and Nigerian forces.

Nasrullah said Daoud had a significant support base and could bring hundreds of fighters with him if he jumped ship -- as well as vital information about Boko Haram's workings and the whereabouts of its top commanders.

"He could expose the money generation and transfer methods the group uses, reveal critical intelligence about the group's inner structure, and maybe even offer up information as to how to kill Shekau," he said.

"If Daoud is really seeking negotiations, the Nigerian government should hurry and take the offer as having him on side could well be a game-changer."

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