Tag: Boko Haram suspects

  • Army releases 128 Boko Haram suspects

    Army releases 128 Boko Haram suspects

    The Army in Maiduguri has released 128 suspects, including four foreigners arrested in connection with Boko Haram activities in Borno State.

    They were handed over to Governor Kashim Shettima by the Chief of Army Staff, Lt. Gen. Tukur Buratai, at the Maumalari Cantonments in Maiduguri.

    Buratai said “The 128 persons comprising 109 men, seven women, 11 under aged and one child were found innocent after thorough investigations jointly carried out by intelligence officers of the Army, police, Department of State Security and representatives of the Borno State Government.”

    He disclosed that three Chadians and one Cameroonian were amongst the 128 freed detainees, adding that all detainees were arrested at different points during military activities in the state.”

    He added: “The Nigerian Army in fulfillment of its responsibility through its operation alongside other security agents and human rights commission had found the suspected Boko Haram members innocent  and deemed it necessary to hand them over to the Borno State Government.

    “The task before the army is to among other s, defeat the insurgents, restore peace from local government to the state level and create an enabling environment for administrative stability.

    “The army will do everything possible to maintain professionalism and respect the rights of individual, hoping that the continued support and cooperation from the people of the state which is highly appreciated will be sustained.”

  • Military frees 182 Boko Haram suspects

    Military frees 182 Boko Haram suspects

    THE military authorities in Maiduguri, the Borno State capital, yesterday freed 182 people arrested by security agents on suspicion of having links with Boko Haram.

    Chief of Army Staff Lt.-Gen Kenneth Minimah, who handed over the suspects to Governor Kashim Shettima at a military base, said the suspects had been cleared by the military authority of not having any links with the insurgents.

    “We have over 100 detainees who were suspected to have link with Boko Haram. They are 100 men, 24 women, 40 underage boys and 18 children.

    “They have been cleared; we have decided to hand them over to the Borno State government.

    “They have been thoroughly investigated and acquitted of any involvement in the activities of Boko Haram or connected with the group,” Minimah said.

    The release of the detainees was one of the highlights of the Army Day celebration marked in the state yesterday, which the Army chief with other top military officers attended.

    Lt.-Gen. Minimah said the event was “to project the achievements, capabilities and prospects of the Nigerian Army, as well as boost the morale of troops fighting Boko Haram in the Northeastern states”.

    Shettima asked the freed suspects to take advantage of their freedom and promised to assist them to return back to normal life.

    He hailed the military for respecting the fundamental human rights of the suspects and displaying a high sense of professionalism in their activities.

  • Security agents arrest six Boko Haram suspects in Jos

    Security agents arrest six Boko Haram suspects in Jos

    Many questions remained unanswered at the weekend as Jos, the Plateau State capital which was bombed twice  last week, was enveloped in fear.

    “Were there 100 suicide bombers unleashed on the Tin City ready to strike?

    “Were there 10 bombs already planted around the city by Boko Haram insurgents ready to go off?

    The Special Task Force (STF) on the Jos crisis said  yesterday that three people died from the failed suicide attack on a football viewing centre in the city on Saturday night.

    Two others were injured. A vehicle driven by the bomber and a block of shops were destroyed, it said in a statement by the STF spokesman Capt. Ikedichi Iweha.

    More than 100 people were killed in the first attack in Jos last week.

    A source within the security agencies alleged that over 100 suicide bombers might have been deployed in Jos.

    The senior security officer said: “Let me tell you, we are in serious trouble in this state. Do you know that since last Tuesday’s explosion  more than six members of Boko Haram have been caught and arrested from various places within the city”

    The source added: “All the tension and rumour you are hearing everywhere in town that some people were caught with bomb here and there in Jos are real. Don’t just call them rumour; they are real. We have discovered at least six of them since that Tuesday attack”

    It was learnt that one of the Boko Haram agents apprehended last Friday at the Air Force base in Jos had confessed that there were at least 100 of them deployed in Jos city to detonate explosives at identified points.

    The suspect reportedly claimed that he was heading for the Airforce Hospital to deliver food to a patient on admission. But a security check on the suspect’s car revealed he was carrying explosives and was immediately apprehended and the explosive disabled.

    According to the source: “The suspect made a confession that even shocked the Air force men interrogating him. He revealed that he was on errand for Boko Haram to deliver explosives at identified location, and that he was not the only one on such errand, he claimed there were at least 100 already despatched to the city with explosives”

    A man suspected to be spying for Boko Haram was apprehended at Mobile Police barrack, the MOPOL 8 close to the Air Force base Jos. The state police spokesperson Felicia Anslem said “the suspect was been arrested and detained for trespassing”

    The arrest of the suspect at MOPOL 8, Jos came after letters of threat allegedly authored by Boko Haram were received at government establishments in the state capital. A similar letter of threat was received at the National Institute for Policy and Strategic Studies (NIPSS), Federal Government College Jos, The Plateau State House of Assembly and other places.

    A security source said: “These threat cannot be treated as mere threats, since after the twin bomb blast. Others explosive have been intercepted and the suspect already helping the security agencies on information about their mission in Jos”

    The Archbishop of Jos, Anglican Communion, Most Rev. Dr. Benjamin Kwashi, yesterday challenged security agencies in Jos to comb and fish out the remaining bombs planted by members of the Boko Haram sect in the city.

    He said a member of the sect, arrested at the wake of last week’s twin bombs that rocked the city confessed that they (Boko Haram) had planted 10 bombs at different locations in the city.

    The Archbishop who spoke in Minna while delivering a sermon titled “The good Shepherd” at the dedication of the Cathedral Church of St. Peter and the presentation of four Archbishops of the church, said:

    “There were twin bomb explosions a few days ago in Jos in which many people were killed. Just yesterday when I was about to come to Minna, another bomb exploded in Jos. We are aware that one of the Boko Haram men arrested by the security has confessed that they planted 10 bombs in the city. We are also aware that one of the bombs has been seen and detonated by the police.

    “But where are the remaining six? The Police must urgently search and recover the hidden bombs to save lives and property”, he pleaded.

    The clery lamented the insurgency has wrecked havoc on the Church in the troubled areas, citing the killing of three Deacons of the church in Taraba State and the wanton destruction of properties in the affected areas of northeast.

    “The Bishop in Taraba state sent me a report that we lost three of our deacons in the state while in Adamawa state, eight members were recently killed. No good shepherd will be happy about such loss of his herds”.

    Kwashi admonished the Church to remain steadfast in prayers while seeking for divine intervention for the country to overcome present security challenges.

  • ACF calls for relief for released Boko Haram suspects

    The pan North’s socio-political organisation, Arewa Consultative Forum (ACF), has urged the Federal Government to give relief materials to suspected Boko Haram members and their families who President Goodluck Jonathan ordered to be released on Tuesday.

    In a communiqué at the end of the joint meeting of its Board of Trustees (BoT) and National Executive Council (NEC) in Kaduna, the forum expressed concerns over the current military operation against Boko Haram in Borno, Yobe and Adamawa states.

    The forum said it will continue to monitor closely developments on the military operation.

    The communiqué, which was read by the forum’s Deputy National Publicity Secretary, Fati Ibrahim, said ACF “welcomes the decision to release people being held in detention on suspicion of belonging to Boko Haram or related crimes. It is our hope that the Federal Government follows (it) through with necessary relief materials to those affected”.

    The forum expressed reservation about the military campaign against the insurgents, adding that experiences had shown that there is the possibility of the military taking heavy-handed actions that would escalate the insecurity rather than solve the problem in the conflict areas. The communiqué reads: “The Board of Trustees and the National Executive Council of the Arewa Consultative Forum met in a joint session this afternoon (Wednesday, May 22) at the Forum’s headquarters in Kaduna.

    “The meeting, called to review progress on the reorganisation of its state chapters, also deliberated on recent developments in the country. At the end of the deliberations, the meeting resolved to issue the following Communiqué:

    •“The ACF is keenly concerned with and continues to monitor closely developments on the ongoing military operations directed against Boko Haram insurgency in parts of northern states.

    •“The forum had expressed reservations about the wisdom of an all-out military campaign as the only strategy for tackling the problem and had, accordingly, welcomed the acceptance by the Federal Government to explore the other options of dialogue and conciliation…”