Tag: Boko Haram fighters

  • Boko Haram fighters paid $3,000 daily, says presidential committee

    A member of the Presidential Committee on the North East Initiative (PCNI) , Dr. Sidi Ali Mohammed, yesterday said that members of the terrorist organisation Boko Haram are being paid $3,000 daily.

    Mohammed spoke at the presentation of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) Sub-Sahara Africa’s Economic Outlook Report in Abuja. According to him, the payment dwarfs the N1,000 daily allowance paid to Nigerian troops at the war front.

    Mohammed, who is the Head of the Humanitarian Assistance and Rehabilitation arm of the PCNI, lamented that Boko Haram has been hijacked and operates like a cartel. “I will give you an example. The Nigerian military, for example, gets N1, 000 per day for being in the Northeast, at the war front, as an allowance.  The same Northeast, where if you are a member of Boko Haram you get $3,000 per day, as allowance.  So it is lucrative.  Sometimes they even give you money upfront.  So we must do something about the youths from where they are recruiting.”

    His answer to the problem, he explained, is that while there is no one-solution to the Boko Haram conflict, various avenues that could guarantee peace should be explored.

    Mohammed said: “If it is amnesty that will guarantee that peace, then we have to think of it.  Most importantly, we need to deplete the army of youths on the streets and take them away from the streets so that Boko Haram does not recruit them.  Don’t forget, they (Boko Haram members) are being killed on daily basis, but they are also recruiting on daily basis.  They are getting people to recruit because it is lucrative.”

    Read also: Air Force strikes Boko Haram in Sambisa forest

    “Part of the reason why this problem has refused to go away is the abundant natural resources in the Lake Chad Region. We need to think outside the box.  It is now more like a cartel.  When you see the type of weapons they use, it is more sophisticated than the type of weapons that our military are using.”

    He likened the BoKo Haram menace “is like a guerilla warfare. As we are here discussing, if somebody here is a member of Boko Haram, he will not say anything. He goes out there to strategise and comes back.  It, therefore, means that the conventional ways of fighting a warfare cannot work here.  It, therefore, calls for thinking outside of the box.”

    Another problem identified by the PCNI member is the rejection of repentant members of Boko Haram who had been de-radicalised by his committee, working with the military but are rejected by the communities, thus creating problems of re-integration.

    Mohammed attributed the rise of the terrorist group to failure of governance. He said: “States and local governments are supposed to be closest to the people.  The local governments are supposed be closest to the people but in all honesty, are they really there?  For those of us that know the North very well, not only in the Northeast, even in the Northwest, the only time you go to the local government secretariat and you see people is 26th, 27th and 28th of the month to collect their salaries.”

    “The moment they collect their salaries, they just disappear.  90% of local government chairmen,  in the North , reside in their state capitals.  So what do we see?  That gap that has been created in terms of governance is what Boko Haram has taken advantage of. It might be news to you that Boko Haram are even collecting revenue from the people where they are operating. They collect taxes. They have government.”

    He said that the PCNEI was making efforts to counter the Boko Haram narrative , as well as, remove the youths from the streets to deny Boko Haram recruitment targets.

    The IMF economist Mr. Siddharth Kothari, noted that “conflicts cause decline in investment, trade and productivity, and destruction of physical and human capital.”

    The government he said, “has to prevent conflicts and mitigate the adverse consequences of conflicts through limiting the loss of human and physical capital, and trying to maintain well-functioning institutions.”

  • Nigerien troops kill 280 Boko Haram fighters

    Troops and air strikes have killed more than 280 Boko Haram militants since the Nigerien Government started an operation against the group last week, the Defense Ministry said.

    Boko Haram has attacked Niger, Chad and Cameroon from its base in northeast Nigeria, where it has been fighting for more than nine years to carve out an Islamist caliphate.

    Niger’s Defense Ministry said in a statement on Wednesday that the army mounted a sweep operation against the group last Friday along the south-eastern Komadugu River, which separates Niger from Nigeria.

    More than 200 militants were “neutralised” by air strikes and 87 were killed by Nigerien troops on the ground, it said.

    Read Also: NAF Helicopter lost in combat – Official

    In June 2016, more than 30 Nigerien soldiers were killed during a Boko Haram attack on the town of Bosso, prompting Chad to send 2,000 troops to help its West African neighbour counter the militants.

    Those troops were withdrawn in October 2017, raising concern about security in the Diffa region.

  • Air Force hits Boko Haram fighters

    The Eid-el-Fitr festival turned sour for Boko Haram terrorists in Parisu and Takwala in Borno State when the Nigeria Air Force (NAF) pounded their base in the area.

    The Air Task Force (ATF) of Operation LAFIYA DOLE, neutralised many of the Boko Haram fighters through the successful air strikes, Air Vice Marshall Olatokunbo Adesanya, NAF’s Director of Public Relations and Information, said yesterday in Abuja.

    “The mission followed the discovery, by NAF Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance (ISR) platforms, of activities of BHTs in the 2 locations,” Adesanya said in a statement.

    “Consequently, the ATF detailed 2 NAF Alpha Jet aircraft, armed with rockets and cannons, to interdict the locations.

    “Overhead the objective, the NAF fighter aircraft acquired and attacked the objectives with rockets and cannons.

    “At the end of the mission, it was observed that the attack platforms successfully engaged the remnants of the terrorists hibernating within the settlements and consequently neutralized them,” he said.

    Adesanya said that the NAF would continue to deploy its platforms to conduct intensive ISR missions aimed at discovering the locations of possible remnants of BHTs in the entire Northeast.

     

  • Five soldiers killed as troops neutralise Boko Haram fighters

    The army last night said five soldiers were killed as troops fought through an ambush laid by Boko Haram terrorists in Borno state.

    According to a statement by the Director of Army public relations Brig Gen Texas Chukwu,  scores of Boko Haram terrorists were killed during the encounter.

    Brig Gen. Chukwu said the bodies were evacuated to a military hospital.

    He said: “Troops of 271 Tasks Force Battalion deployed in Operation Lafiya Dole today Thursday 31 May 2018, while on clearance operation along Pridang – Bitta in Gwoza Local Government Area of Borno State, fought through an ambush staged by elements of Boko Haram Terrorists.

    “During the fight troops ran into Improvised Explosive Device (IED) buried along Pridang – Bitta road by Boko Haram Terrorists before encountering the ambush.

    ” In the fire fight that ensued, the gallant troops fought through the ambush, they neutralized several Boko Haram Terrorists, while others fled with gunshot wounds.

    “Sadly,  five military personnel paid the supreme price as a result of the Improvised Explosive Device attack.

    “The remains of the deceased personnel have been promptly evacuated to 7 Division Medical Services and Hospital.”

  • Five Boko Haram fighters killed, commander arrested

    Five Boko Haram fighters killed, commander arrested

    Soldiers fighting the Boko Haram insurgency in Borno State have killed five of the terrorists and captured a top commander of the group in the ongoing operation in Sambisa Forest and the Lake Chad basin.

    Colonel Onyeama Nwachukwu, Deputy Director, Army Public Relations of Operation Lafiya Dole, said in Maiduguri that troops also rescued three civilians and recovered vehicles as well as high calibre ammunition over the last few days.

    Besides, the troops reportedly engaged and neutralised a number of insurgents while attempting to escape the military blocking position in one of the cleared enclaves ‘Sabil-Huda’, deep in Sambisa Forest.

    Nwachukwu said that the troops recovered one G-III rifle magazine, one life jacket, a light machine gun metal link, four rounds of Anti-Aircraft ammunition, four rounds of 7.62mm (NATO) ammunition and three rounds of 7.62mm (Special) ammunition.

    “Unfortunately, two soldiers were injured in the process; they had been evacuated by the Nigerian Air Force and are responding to treatment,” he said.

    Nwachukwu said that the troops on Friday launched offensive targeting a terrorist’s hideouts up ‘CAMP ZAIRO’, and neutralised a number of insurgents in spite of initial damage caused to their Armoured Fighting Vehicle by Improvised Explosive Device (IED) planted beneath the ground.

    He said that the troops killed five insurgents; with several others wounded and recovered ammunition at a hideout in Parisu, Sambisa Forest.

    Troops of 151 Battalion in conjunction with “7 Division Support Group’ also cleared nine terrorists’ hideouts along Frigi-Izza area.

    The director added that the troops also recovered one motorcycle, two bicycles, 10 bicycle tyres, one bicycle, three Boko Haram flags, a solar panel, five drums filled with grain, two mattresses, two grinding machines, three bags of metal scraps, two motorcycle tyres and two underground grain silos.

    Also recovered are one AK-47 rifle magazine, 1 dummy rifle, a round of 12.7mm ammunition, 12 empty cases of 7.62mm ammunition, assorted IED materials and a tool box.

     

  • 15 Boko Haram fighters killed in sect’s surprise attack

    15 Boko Haram fighters killed in sect’s surprise attack

    An attempt by Boko Haram fighters to invade Rann,a small community in Borno State yesterday ended in a tragedy for the terror sect .

    At least 15 of them were killed in a dawn attack on a contingent of soldiers from 3 Battalion and 112 Task Force Battalion stationed in the area.

    The troops overpowered the invaders killing 15 on the spot,while the rest took to their heels.

    The terrorists are believed to be among those recently dislodged from Sambissa Forest

    Military sources said yesterday that the shootout lasted several hours.

    Four soldiers were wounded  but were subsequently evacuated by a Nigerian Air Force (NAF) Augusta Helicopter, a recent addition to the NAF’s fleet from the Presidential Air Fleet (PAF) to Maiduguri,the state capital.

    The attack came a week after President Muhammadu Buhari said Boko Haram fighters had been routed from the forest which had served as their operational base for several years.

    A military  source in the NAF said: “four wounded soldiers were today evacuated from the battle front in Rann to Maiduguri for medical treatment.”

    The wounded soldiers were given first aid treatment aboard the helicopter on the way to Maiduguri by the Air Force personnel.

    It was gathered that the NAF responded swiftly  to a call for evacuation of the wounded soldiers.

    The Theater Commander, Operation LafiyaDole, Major General Leo Iraboh said  troops began advance on Sambisa Forest Camp Zairo on December  22, 2016 at about 0800hrs with the complementary deployment of Air Force jets and artillery.

    The Theater Commander insisted that the Army is in firm  control of Sambisa forest despite the video recording posted this week by the elusive Boko Haram leader, Abubakar Shekau denying the claims. Major General Iraboh said the Army is currently pursuing fleeing remnants of the terrorist and would not rest until they are totally routed.

    Ammunitions recovered from the Boko Haram invaders yesterday include two AK47 rifles, one M21 rifle, ,four FN rifles,  20 X 7.62MM special, 4 X FN extra magazine and some locally made bombs.

    Yesterday’s  battle is the first since the military dislodged chased the sect from Sambisa .

  • Chibok girls: Buhari asks UN to serve as negotiator

    Chibok girls: Buhari asks UN to serve as negotiator

    President Muhammadu Buhari has told the United Nations Secretary General, Ban Ki-moon, that Nigeria would welcome intermediaries from the global body as part of his administration’s commitment to swapping the abducted schoolgirls from Chibok with Boko Haram fighters in custody.

    Speaking during a bilateral meeting with the UN scribe at the sidelines of the 71st UN General Assembly in New York, President Buhari said the Nigerian government was willing to bend over backwards, to get the Chibok girls released from captivity.

    He said: “The challenge is in getting credible and bona fide leadership of Boko Haram to discuss with,”

    “The split in the insurgent group is not helping matters. Government had reached out, ready to negotiate, but it became difficult to identify credible leaders. We will welcome intermediaries such as UN outfits, to step in.”

    The President, in a statement by the Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina, also reiterated that the teachings of Boko Haram were far from being Islamic, as neither Islam, nor any other religion, advocates hurting the weak and innocent.

    “The fact that they kill men, women, children, and other people wantonly, and shout Allahu Akbar (God is great) shows that they do not know that Allah at all. If they did, they would not shed innocent blood,” President Buhari said.

    He thanked Ban Ki-moon for the moral and material support given to Nigeria, which has enabled the country surmount many of the challenges facing her.

    In his response, the UN Secretary General congratulated President Buhari on the anti-corruption war, declaring: “You are highly respected by world leaders, including myself. Your persona has given your country a positive image.”

    He said the UN recognized the achievements of the Buhari administration against Boko Haram, urging that human rights be upheld always, to prevent a repeat of the scenario being witnessed in Syria.

    Ban Ki-moon also thanked the Nigerian leader for his commitment to issues on climate change, adding that the government should “own the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs),” for the good of its citizens.

  • Troops kill 16 Boko Haram fighters, injure several others

    Troops kill 16 Boko Haram fighters, injure several others

    Boko Haram fighters yesterday attacked troops stationed at Rann in Kala Balge local government area of Borno State.

    The terrorists, who were with Motorcycles Borne Improvised Explosive Devices (MCBIED), Anti-Aircraft Guns and other weapons, launched the attack at about 5.00pm.

    The ensuing exchange of fire that lasted for hours left 16 of the terrorists dead.

    Several others were seriously wounded in the exchange that also left two soldiers dead and three with minor injuries.

    The Nigerian Army spokesman Sani Usman said the troops killed seven of the attackers instantly while quite a number escaped with gunshot wounds.

    During clearance operations, the troops discovered nine more Boko Haram terrorists in the surrounding areas.

    Usman said the troops also recovered a General Purpose Machine Gun, Rocket Propelled Grenade, ammunitions and captured two of the terrorists alive.

    He explained: “The bodies of the two fallen heroes and the wounded in action soldiers have been evacuated to Maiduguri, while reinforcement was sent from Gomboru Ngala”.

    He said that in a related development, troops also discovered and safely detonated 2 Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs) planted along Gomboru-Rann road.

    “It is believed that the IEDs were planted to prevent troops’ reinforcement to Rann while the attack lasted,” Usman stated.

    He further revealed that the Commanding Officer of 3 Battalion has visited the troops and held Durbar with them.

  • 80 Boko Haram men join ISIS in Libya ,Niger

    80 Boko Haram men join ISIS in Libya ,Niger

    •Terror sect strengthens ties with Islamic State

    The net sect, Boko Haram, is  believed to have dispatched no fewer than 80 of its members to join forces with the ISIS extremists fighting in Libya, an agency report said yesterday.

    Boko Haram insurgents are also suspected  to be fighting in Niger Republic in what is being interpreted as the strengthening of its ties with the Islamic State Group.

    The sect pledged allegiance to IS’s in March.  In June BOko Haram was declared its West African province.

    About two weeks ago,two young Nigerians from Kano were arrested in India as they made to cross into  Pakistan at the border of both countries.

    Their destination was Iraq where ISIS is waging a war against the authorities.

    Similarly, the  Lebanese authorities on August 15 arrested  hard-line IS’s cleric Ahmad al-Assir at Beirut airport while attempting to  fly to Nigeria on a forged Palestinian passport with a Nigerian visa.

    The development has sparked a security alert in the country with President Muhammadu Buhari ordering an investigation into how the Nigerian Embassy issued al-Assir the visa.

    The Sentinel magazine of the Washington-based Jamestown Foundation in an article estimated that between  80 and  200 Boko Haram fighters are currently in the Libyan city of Sirte.

    It also said that Algerian security forces believe that Boko Haram fighters have joined other militants in northern Niger.

    “The openness of migration routes from Nigeria through eastern Niger to Libya makes travel … fairly straightforward, and the Islamic State can easily afford to pay smugglers to carry militants (and weapons) along that route,” it said.

    The Nigeria Immigration Service claimed to have barred  23,472 people from leaving the country between January 2014 and March 2015.

    “There have been reports in recent times of some Nigerians departing to join terrorist groups especially in the Middle East and North Africa,” said PR Nigeria, which publishes government news.

     

  • Fleeing Boko Haram fighters drown in Lake Chad

    Fleeing Boko Haram fighters drown in Lake Chad

    •Troops survive 1,500 land mines, reclaim Baga—DHQ

    Scores of Boko Haram terrorists drowned in Lake Chad at the weekend as they sought an escape route following a siege to the fishing town of Baga, Borno State, by Nigerian troops.

    The insurgents had seized the town last month, and then proceeded to plunder the military base in the town.

    But the troops had the last laugh yesterday after catching the insurgents unawares in a complex operation which the Defence Headquarters said involved clearing over 1,500 land mines laid across the area by the terrorists.

    Many other insurgents died during the ground and air strikes, the DHQ said.

    Five anti-aircraft guns belonging to the sect were destroyed while 34 motorcycles and five vehicles were recovered from them.

    The Director of Defence Information, Major General Chris Olukolade, said in a statement that “a large number of terrorists drowned in the Lake Chad as they fled the heavy bombardment by Nigerian Air force heralding the advance of Nigerian  troops on mission to flush them out of Baga.

    “Not even the strategy of mining over 1500 spots with land mines on the routes leading to the town  could save the terrorists from the aggressive move of advancing troops.

    “All the land mines were skillfully cleared one after the other. Eventually, the resistance of the terrorists collapsed and the land forces finally stormed the town in the early hours of Friday.

    “Many of the terrorists died while an unknown but substantial number of them fled with various degrees of injury, in the series of encounter along the routes of advance as troops headed for Baga.”

    He said the troops   began clearing the terrorists from Baga on arrival in the town early yesterday.

    A comprehensive cordon and search phase of military operation, he said, “has now commenced to enable troops mop up arms and ammunition and also apprehend any terrorist who might be hiding in the vicinity.”

    The exercise will also determine details of the casualties inflicted or incurred in the course of the operations.

    He said  troops are also  engaging the insurgents in 12 other  locations: Gajigana, Ngaze, Ngenzai, Marte Junction, Mile 90, Yoyo, Kekeno, Kukawa, Cross Kauwa, Kangarwa, Amirari “and other localities where troops have flushed out the terrorists in the operations preceding the entry to Baga.”

    “The troops are now dominating and conducting aggressive patrols in the locations. The morale of troops remain high,” Olukolade added.