Tag: boko haram

  • NEMA DG wants more collaboration on humanitarian crisis in N. East

    NEMA DG wants more collaboration on humanitarian crisis in N. East

    Alhaji Mustapha Maihaja, Director-General, National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), has called for more collaboration among stakeholders toward addressing humanitarian crisis in the North-East.

    Maihaja made the call during an interactive meeting with humanitarian stakeholders on Sunday in Maiduguri.

    “NEMA has the primary responsibility of responding to emergencies and coordinating humanitarian crisis in the country.

    “The North-East, especially Borno, is worst affected by the devastating Boko Haram insurgency; we need massive collaboration among stakeholders to tackle the resultant humanitarian crisis here,” he said.

    He promised that NEMA would continue to provide the support necessary to improve the living conditions of displaced persons, noting however, that more would be achieved if all stakeholders worked together.

    The NEMA boss said that the interactive session had helped the agency to get a feedback on its performances, especially the shortcomings.

    “We intend to meet with experts and examine our performances; we will also contact international organisations and appeal for increased support.

    “We shall also discuss the current realities with the Federal Government and crave for more support,” he said.

    Mr Peter Lundberg, UN Deputy Humanitarian Coordinator to Nigeria, had earlier told the NEMA boss that there were 75 partners working in the North-East, among them UN agencies, NGOs, and other stakeholders.

  • Borno residents appeal to military on suicide bomb attacks

    Borno residents appeal to military on suicide bomb attacks

    Borno residents have appealed to the military to intervene in the increased suicide bomb attacks by suspected Boko Haram insurgents in the state.

    Across section of those interviewed by the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Maiduguri made the appeal on Sunday in Maiduguri.

    Malam Bakura Modu, a local hunter said that the wave of attacks especially in Maiduguri, has created negative impression about the current situation in the state.

    “There is no doubt that the military has recorded great successes against the Boko Haram insurgents.

    “But the recent spate of suicide bomb attacks is creating wrong impression in the media that the group is still strong,” Modu said.

    He said that the military must live up to the expectations by finding quick solutions to the bombings.

    Modu said local hunters were ready to join the military in the search for the insurgents in the bush.

    “We have been expressing our willingness to join the fight against the insurgents in the bush, but the military had always turned us back.

    “We are hoping that this time around they will consider our proposal,” he said.

    Mr Samuel Anjukui, a retired police officer corroborated Modu’s claim.

    “The military has within a few months decimated the insurgents, reclaiming territories and rescuing many abducted persons.

    “But the recent up surge in the number of suicide bomb attacks has created worries in the minds of the people,” Anjukui said.

    He added:” In the last few months it is almost certain that incidences of bomb blasts will occur every weekend.

    “The situation has even worsened now as the blasts have almost assumed a daily dimension”.

    Anjukui, however, expressed optimism in the ability of the military to address the situation.

    “The military has the capabilities to address the problem; it must therefore rise up to the occasion by halting the negative trend.

    “It is either they make use of high technology for early detection of explosive materials or take the battle to the door steps of the insurgents in the bush,” he said.

    Malam Musa Inuwa a civil servant offered a different perspective.

    “I think that the natives hold the key to ending the ugly trend the military has done its best by degrading the insurgents.

    “But ending the crisis depend on the natives because the insurgents live among the people, they plan their attacks among the people.

    “As long as the people are not willing to expose them, the attacks will continue,” Inuwa said.(NAN)

  • Boko Haram: Troops rescue 998

    Boko Haram: Troops rescue 998

    TROOPS of the 3 Battalion and 22 Brigade yesterday rescued about 998 persons from Boko Haram insurgents in Maiduguri, Borno State.

    The Nigerian Army Headquarters said the operations leading to the rescue were carried out by the troops with some civilian JTF.

    Director Army Public Relations, Brig. Gen. Sani Usman, in a statement, said: “Following confirmed information about the presence of remnants of Boko Haram terrorists in some villages around Ngala, troops of 3 Battalion, 22 Brigade Nigeria Army on Friday along with some civilian JTF embarked on fighting patrol to the area.

    “The patrol team had a fierce encounter with the terrorists at Ndufu which they decisively dealt with before proceeding to clear Muktu and Muzuri as well as nearby communities within the area.

    “Although some of the terrorists fled to various directions on sighting the troops, the patrol team was able to neutralise nine terrorists, destroyed their Improvised Explosive Device (IED) making factory and rescue 998 persons.

    “Those rescued were 125 at Ndufu, 802 at Muktu and 71 persons at Muzuri. The troops also vaccinated all children under the age of five with polio vaccinations despite the fierce battle.”

    Usman added:  “In addition the troops recovered an AK-47 Rifle Magazine, 2 Boko Haram terrorist flags, 4 Motorcycles, 2 Solar Panels, 2 already prepared IEDs, Detonating cords and other explosive making components.

    “It is gratifying to note that 3 Battalion has maintained its status as one of the best fighting unit in the theatre as they did not sustain any casualty or injury during the operation.”

  • Boko Haram: Of Sugar Coated Lies and Poisonous Potions

    The most dangerous level of lying is when the liar becomes addicted to manipulating the truth to an extent that he begins to believe his own lies as the truth. According to Vladimir Lenin, “A lie told often enough becomes the truth.” Therein lies the danger to the society because history is forever distorted when such lies, presented as truth, go unchallenged as the future generations would read perverted accounts of events and would be non the wiser for it. It is this concept that convener of ENDS (Every Nigerian Do Something) terrorist sympathizer, Perry Brimah, sought to explore in his treatise that claimed that Jonathan defeated Boko Haram while President Muhammadu Buhari mopped up.

    It is no surprise that Brimah got the brief to market evil as good. He has a track record in managing spin albeit unsuccessfully. His resume includes presenting fanatical members of the Islamic Movement in Nigeria (IMN) as victims and martyrs that are being oppressed by a repressive Federal Republic of Nigeria. The only problem? The group is an outlawed entity that a competent Judicial Panel deemed as militarized and radical. So is his brand of truth that it sought to misinform about a judicial panel.
    Except he can prove otherwise, the essence of Brimah’s latest venture is to wrongly credit the disastrous government of former President Goodluck Jonathan with defeating an insurgency he helped aggravated. Given the mind boggling tales of malfeasance that surface daily about that dark era, Brimah’s lies fall in the realm of the ultimate insult. It is even more irresponsible that he unskillfully tried to mask the lies with a generous dose of half truths and those truths that cannot be wished away.
    The truths in this case include his account of the initial blame game and ethnic biases that dominated the early days of Boko Haram becoming feral. As he noted, Jonathan was indifferent to the extent that he concluded the terror group was a creation of Nigerians in the north and they can kill themselves for all he cared. It was in the same period that the then opposition leader and now President Muhammadu Buhari expressed concerns at the way innocent people were being caught in the crossfire on the few occasions that the Army Jonathan commanded fought the terrorists. This truth does not however offer any mitigation for the half lies that followed.
    For instance, Brimah, defender of human rights and freedom of the people, rues the decision of Jonathan to only impose a limited “half-baked” state of emergency in Borno state when he finally roused from his self induced slumber to act. The version emergency rule that this activists had wanted was for an elected governor to be sacked by an equally elected president. It was a misadventure under one time President Olusegun Obasanjo, which the law courts have put to rest as illegal. The implication of his preferred approach is that the Convener of ENDS absolutely has no regard for the constitution and would rather it is discarded to pave way for the hounding of people that are not in his good book.
    Another half truth is presenting the refusal of the United States’ Barack Obama to sell military hardwares to the Jonathan led Nigeria and further blocking other countries from doing so. One, the Armed Forces under Jonathan barely followed rules of engagement, which resulted in accusations of human rights abuse, a justification that Brimah’s ally, Amnesty International explored to pursue the blockage of arms sales to Nigeria. The problem of human rights abuses created under Jonathan was to remain a burden for the military until the government of President Buhari was able to reverse the trend. Two, the pervasive corruption and pathological theft of state resources on an industrial scale under Jonathan was another justification for the US blocking arms sales. Although many of us criticized the US at that time, with the benefit of the what is known as “Dasukigate”, Nigerians and indeed the world now knows better.
    That the former National Security Adviser (NSA), Sambo Dasuki, circulated pictures of hardware supposedly purchased by the Jonathan government is something for which he should separately stand trial. First, the pictures were mostly photoshopped jobs of images stolen from the internet; if these hardware were procured as stated he should tender them as evidence in his ongoing trial instead of challenging the jurisdiction of the court and seeking technicalities to explain the theft of $2.3 billion. Secondly, which competent NSA would openly advertise his latest acquisition when that would provide the needed information to his enemies, which would help them modify their attack strategies?
    The lies won’t stop coming. Why should we praise the clueless one for attempting to solve a problem he worsened in the first place. In the almost six years he could have done something meaningful he did not: he could have at least prevented the terror group from going ballistic like it did even if he did not stamp it out. Instead, as Brimah himself admitted, he was exploiting Boko Haram as a political tool for regional suppression and as a constant subhead for stealing money. At some point, when it became clear that he would roundly lose any election, he was hinted to have considered using Boko Haram as cover not to hold elections – he later proved this by using it as a cover to shift the polls in the hope that he would recover some ground before votes are cast. To justify the postponement of the elections, the army that was largely demoralized under him was for the first time ordered to fight and show some result for PR benefits. The proof? Boko Haram usually returns to any town or village the Jonathan commanded Army liberated.
    By the way, these tales of liberated places under Jonathan came at a price higher than paying $350 per night to mercenaries who would normally be standing trial in their home country for committing crimes; we also paid the price of suffering the indignity of leaving our affairs in the hands of people who would find a way for the crisis to persist so that they can continue to get paid.
    As for the stories of the places that Brimah considered as liberated under Jonathan, one only needs ask why he refused to do a victory lap to the place and why IDPs did not immediately return there. He should also explain why the military under President Buhari had to liberate these places a second time. Had Jonathan won the election, would he have bothered about the mopping up that Brimah is now dismissing as inconsequential. If a mopping up is not done and the liberated places demined would it have qualified as defeat of the terror group?
    It is comical that Brimah, who is one of those chanting the anthem that Boko Haram cannot be considered defeated, has now changed gear to claim that they were defeated under the previous government. This double standard on an unprecedented scale.
    While we may be already accustomed to Brimah’s penchant for distorting facts to suit his current brief, this treatise of his should put Nigerians on alert because like the gathering of clouds that precede storms, articles like this from Brimah indicate that there is a major offensive in the offing against the state. His article is the poisonous potion intended to numb the public consciousness to the realities of the dark days that his hero, Goodluck Jonathan, brought Nigeria to the precipe. Beyond the now, the article is further intended to poison history and archives so that future generations will be fed lies.
    We must therefore not encourage Brimah, or any other person for that matter, to continue repeating lies to the extent that they begin to sound like the truth. What is needed is to call him out on this distortion of the Boko Haram defeat story. We must call him out on any future manipulation of truth he may get the brief to carry out.

    Kolawole PhD, a University teacher contributed this piece from Keffi, Nasarawa State.

  • Suicide bomber killed in failed Borno attack

    The Borno State Police Command has confirmed the killing of a suspected suicide bomber after a failed attack at the University of Maiduguri (UNIMAID) on Saturday.

    The spokesman of the command, Mr. Victor Isuku, disclosed this in a statement in Maiduguri.

    He said, “Today at about 10:00hours, a lone male suicide bomber detonated explosive strapped to his body.

    “The bomber had taken cover in a ditch within the neighbourhood of the University of Maiduguri (UNIMAID) Children Secondary School, at the eastern end of the campus.

    “The bomber sighted security personnel coming towards the direction of his hiding place and hurriedly detonated his explosive, killing him only.”

    He said police had already cordoned off the place and rendered it safe.

    “Police anti bomb team were promptly dispatched to the scene to sanitize and render the area safe. Normalcy has since been restored to the area,” the police spokesman added.

    Three suspected suicide-bombers died in a failed attack at the university female hostel on Thursday night.

    NAN

     

     

  • Troops clear out Boko Haram militants from Borno villages

    Troops clear out Boko Haram militants from Borno villages

    Rescue 998 persons

    Troops from 3 Battalion, 22 Brigade Nigerian Army, on Friday flushed out Boko Haram insurgents from some villages in Ngala local government area of Borno State.

    The Director of Army Public Relations, Brig. Gen. Sani Kukasheka Usman, said in a statement that troops also rescued 998 people held hostage by the terrorists.

    Usman said the civilian joint task force joined the troops in raiding the terrorists’ hideouts.

    The statement read: “Following confirmed information about the presence of remnants of Boko Haram terrorists in some villages around Ngala, troops of 3 Battalion, 22 Brigade Nigerian Army, on Friday, 19th May 2017, along with some civilian JTF embarked on fighting patrol to the area.

    “The patrol team had a fierce encounter with the terrorists at Ndufu which they decisively dealt with before proceeding to clear Muktu, Muzuri and nearby communities within the area.

    “Although some of the terrorists fled to various directions on sighting the troops, the patrol team was able to neutralize nine terrorists, destroyed their Improvised Explosive Device (IED) making factory and rescued 998 persons.

    “125 people were rescued at Ndufu, 802 at Muktu and 71 persons at Muzuri. Interestingly, despite the heat of the battle, the troops also vaccinated all children under the age of five with polio vaccinations.

    “In addition, the troops recovered one AK-47 Rifle with registration number 565231515, an AK-47 Rifle Magazine, two Boko Haram terrorists’ flags, four motorcycles, two solar panels, two already prepared IEDs, detonating cords and other explosive making components.”

     

  • 106 Chibok girls, 11,894  Boko Haram hostages freed so far, says defence minister

    106 Chibok girls, 11,894 Boko Haram hostages freed so far, says defence minister

    At least 106 Chibok girls and 11,894 others Boko Haram hostages have been freed so far through the efforts of the federal government and the Nigerian army.

    The figure was made known on Thursday by the Minister for Defence Mansur Dan-Ali

    The minister spoke at a 2-day retreat organized by the ministry held at the National Institute for Policy and Strategic Studies (NIPSS) Kuru, Jos with the theme; “Enhancing Civil-MilitaryRelations, A Panacea for promoting security and national development”

    According to the minister, “More than 12,000 Boko Haram captives have been freed; the figure includes the 106 Chibok girls that were abducted in 2014.

    “But that figure of success not withstanding, more needed to be done to consolidate on the efforts to sustain the peace and security currently enjoyed.

    “For more to be achieved, the military components of the ministry and the civilians must work hard, understand each other and have mutual respect and trust.

    “The combined efforts of members of the armed forces had successfully degraded the Boko Haram insurgents, making it difficult for members to regroup and carry out organised attacks,” he said.

    In his remarks, Plateau Governor Simon Lalong described the retreat, targeted at enhancing civil-military relationship, as “apt and of great significance”.

    Lalong said, “Plateau had had its share of security challenges and had seen seen how collaborations between the military and civilians had ensured quick resolution of internal conflicts”

    The governor called for more bridges of understanding between the military and civilians, saying that such unity was key to effective discharge of constitutional duties.

    The Speaker of the House of Representatives, Mr Yakubu Dogora, in his remarks, declared that power was not in the barrel of the gun but in the content of the heart.

    “Holding guns and ranks should not give anyone a sense of superiority over members of the society; it should be a humbling factor and be managed with a great sense of responsibility,” he said.

    Dogara, however, urged civilians to respect constituted authorities and embrace regular dialogue on matters of national importance.

  • Army arrests 126 Boko Haram militants in IDPs camp

    The Nigeria Army on Wednesday said it has arrested 126 suspected Boko Haram terrorists at the Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) camp in Damboa, Borno.

    The Theatre Commander, Operation Lafiya Dole, Maj.-Gen. Lucky Irabor, who disclosed this to journalists in Maiduguri, said the suspects were flushed out during mop up operations.

    Irabor said the mop up was conducted after Boko Haram terrorists stormed Sabon Gari area in Damboa local government area of the state.

    He said, “During the attack, we lost about six soldiers and equipment, some of our soldiers were also wounded.

    “After the unfortunate incident, a joint operation was carried out by 3 and 125 task force brigade of the army.

    “Based on intelligent report available, we learnt there was an attempt by Boko Haram to attack Damboa town and many of the insurgents have infiltrated the IDPs camp in Damboa.

    “We also have an intelligent report that many of those insurgents that participated in the attack on Sabon Gari have infiltrated into the IDPs camp.

    “During the raid on the camp, one of the terrorists in particular was identified to have taken part in the Sabon Gari attack.

    “When we searched him, we found a wallet on him containing the Identity card of one of the soldiers that was killed during the attack.

    “So, in essence, that gave the purpose for further operations that our troops of 125 Brigade and the Civilian JTF rounded up about 126 of the terrorists in the camp.

    “As you all know that peace has started returning to the areas, but we realise that the Boko Haram terrorists were hiding under law abiding citizens to continue to cause havoc.

    “The operation is a continuous one, even though the arrest had elicited reactions from some NGOs working in the camp, also the IDPs, who viewed what we are doing differently.

    “This was what really happened, though yesterday, there was an incident in Konduga where three suicide bombers detonated their explosives killing themselves and wounded some locals.

    “Also, we had a case where some of our troops on patrol in Dikwa ran into an Improvised Explosive Device, where two soldiers were wounded. But they are getting better in the hospital.”

    NAN

  • IDPs cannot return to Bama before Ramadan – Shettima

    IDPs cannot return to Bama before Ramadan – Shettima

    Gov. Kashim Shettima of Borno has said that returning Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) to Bama Local Government Area before Ramadan is no longer feasible because of current military operations in Sambisa Forest.

    Shettima had promised to return IDPs to liberated communities by 29, May.

    However on Tuesday, the governor announced a change of plan when he inaugurated 12 public infrastructure rebuilt by Borno Government in Bama with N360 million provided by the Victims Support Fund (VSF).
    The fund, established in 2014 with public donations, has retired Lt.-Gen.  Theophilus .Y Danjuma as Chairman.

    The governor said: “Our goal was for our people to be able to return to Bama before this Ramadan.

    ‘’Unfortunately, this is not feasible because the military is still carrying out operations in some areas around the Sambisa as part of mop up exercise in the yet to be concluded fight against Boko Haram.

    “We will continue to work with security agencies to review situations. Our number one priority is the security and safety of our people.

    “We will not allow any IDP return to any community that has not regained 100 per cent safety.

    “When IDP’S return to communities, they will still need to go to their farms, markets and to travel for economic and social purposes.

    “We must be sure that farms are safe and routes are safe before we allow our people to return. But even while we do the reviews, we will continue with our aggressive reconstruction works.’’
    He added: “We will not wait till eternity.

    ‘’We are very optimistic that very soon, the entire Borno will be safe enough for full habitation. We look forward to Borno reclaiming peace, security and progress.”

    Shettima said the government was laying emphasis on Bama but paying attention to all parts of the state.

    ”For the purpose of setting records straight, I think I should use this opportunity to once again explain that  our focus is on all parts of Borno not just on Bama.

    “Our reconstruction works actually started in northern Borno where we rebuilt numerous public and private infrastructures in Kaga Local Government Area.

    “We are currently working in 14 local government areas but there is special emphasis on Bama, Mobbar and Gwoza.’’

    He said Bama was getting the highest attention because it was adjudged the worst hit by the insurgency in the Northeast.

    He said the Post Insurgency Recovery and Peace Building Assessment conducted on the Northeast by the World Bank, the European Union, the Presidency and State Government in the northeast indicated so.

    “More than 80 per cent of public and private infrastructures were destroyed by Boko Haram during their occupation.

    “The Boko Haram as we all know, also occupied Gwoza but they did not destroy Gwoza as much as they destroyed Bama.

    “So, our idea of facing Bama is to confront the most difficult challenge in a bold manner so that our task becomes less.’’

    Shettima said next to Bama in terms of massive destruction was Mobbar.

    ‘’We are currently working in Mobbar. We have deployed so much resources so that we also confront the rebuilding challenge” he said.
    In his remarks, Danjuma, represented by Vice- Chairman of VSF, Tijjani Tumsah, said the fund decided to intervene in Bama because it was impressed by the efforts of the Borno Government.

    He said while the fund provided N250 million for the reconstruction of 24 projects in Dikwa last year, the state government used the fund to rebuild not only the 24 projects but added 16 others.

     

  • It’s like another imprisonment, this time by military – Uncle of released Chibok girl

    It’s like another imprisonment, this time by military – Uncle of released Chibok girl

    82 of Nigeria’s Chibok schoolgirls are free thanks to a prisoner swap between the Nigerian government and Boko Haram. The release is the biggest since the armed group swarmed a school in northern Nigeria in April 2014, kidnapping 276 girls.

    But the ordeal is not over for the freed girls and their families, according to Peter Joseph, the uncle of one of the 21 schoolgirls released by Boko Haram in October 2016.

    More than six months later, his niece, Sarah, is still in a government rehabilitation camp where the girls rarely see their families. “We were very happy to learn of the news that she was released,” he told The Stream’s Femi Oke. “But we are not very much impressed with the way the government is handling the whole rehabilitation process.”

    Since her release, he’s only seen his niece once, when he travelled to Chibok last December. Even then, he says there were set time limits on visits, and many topics – like her experience as a prisoner – were off limits. He calls her often but said she is only allowed to talk for two-three minutes before being cut off. He said his niece has told him that “only females can sneak in to see them sometimes but males are not allowed into the compound.”

    “Nobody is allowed to see them,” he said. “So it’s like another imprisonment, but this one has to do with the government.”

    Peter’s sister Elizabeth is still being held by Boko Haram.

    The Stream also discussed the dangers of isolation; what rehabilitation means in this situation; and whether the ‘Chibok girls’ have become too famous to ever truly be free.