Tag: boko haram

  • Three suicide bombers killed in Borno attack

    Three suicide bombers killed in Borno attack

    Three suicide bombers were killed Friday in a pre-dawn attack close to the NNPC depot on Damboa Road, Maiduguri.

    Three fuel tankers were set ablaze in the attack, ahead of a planned visit by the United Nations Security Council to assess the Boko Haram crisis in Nigeria.

    One of the bombers, an elderly woman, blew herself up beside a stationary tanker loaded with fuel around 3 a.m.

    With her was a young man in his teens and a girl who continued down the road toward the fuel depot until they were challenged by soldiers who fired at them to avert what could have been a major attack on the fuel depot.

    “We are lucky. Today could have been another sad day for us in Maiduguri,” the State Police Commissioner Damian Chukwu told reporters at the scene.

    “They (soldiers) ordered them to stop but they chose to run,” Gajibo said. “The male suicide bomber detonated his explosives near S. Baba (gas) filling station, while the girl was shot at by the military and ran under a parked truck loaded with petrol products which went up in flames” when her explosives detonated.

    Firefighters razed to the spot, opposite the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), to put out the fire.

    Spokesman for the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), Abdulkadir Ibrahim confirmed three deaths.

    He said: “the fire has been brought under control while evacuation has been concluded.”

    “Three suicide bombers came into the city through Damboa around 3:00 am (0200 GMT) and they were spotted by civilian (vigilantes),” he said.

    “They quickly ran and hid under three petrol tankers, where one of them detonated his explosives, killing all of them.”

    The attack came just days before a delegation of the U.N. Security Council is due  in Maiduguri as part of a four-nation tour of countries in the Lake Chad Basin devastated by the seven-year Boko Haram uprising that has killed more than 20,000.

    Yesterday, the Security Council members were in Cameroon for meetings with top officials and an encounter with the multinational force that has been fighting Boko Haram extremists.

    Council members also plan to go to Chad and Niger, then on to Nigeria, where they are expected to visit a camp in Borno State for people displaced by Boko Haram.

  • Boko Haram: UN yet to receive sanction request

    The United Nation on Friday denied receiving a letter reportedly written by a former President of the Senate, Chief Ameh Ebute, in which he accused some of Nigeria’s neighbours of complacency in the fight against the Boko Haram insurgency.

    Ebute wants such countries sanctioned.

    The letter was supposed to have been addressed to the UN Secretary-General, António Guterres, and a copy sent to the Chief Prosecutor, International Criminal Court, Hague.

    However, Mr. Stephane Dujarric, the spokesman for the Secretary-General, denied knowledge of the letter.

    “I’ve seen the press reports. I have not seen the letter,” he said.

    “Obviously, the question of sanctions is up for the Council.

    “And I think for the UN, for our part, we’ve always counted on the cooperation of all countries in the Lake Chad Basin in the fight against Boko Haram.”

    Ebute had said in the letter “that each time the insurgents strike in Nigeria, they escape into either or all of these countries for refuge, during which time, they recuperate, re-energise, re-arm and surface to attack new targets in Nigeria.

    “It must be emphasized that the three countries have always been the entry and exit points for terrorists into and out of Nigeria.

    “Since the fall of Sambisa forest, their safest haven in Borno State, residues of insurgents have relocated to these countries, from where they stray into Nigerian territories to launch random attacks on soft and obscure targets.”

    The former Senate President urged the UN Secretary-General to invoke relevant instruments, particularly Article 99 of the UN Charter.

    He added that the Secretary-General should draw the attention of the Security Council to investigate the “nuances of the consuming terrorism undercurrents” in Nigeria, which are potent enough to cause international breach of peace and security.

  • We won’t stop vigilance against Boko Haram, says Osinbajo

    We won’t stop vigilance against Boko Haram, says Osinbajo

    Acting President Yemi Osinbajo said yesterday the Nigerian security agencies will keep up their vigilance against Boko Haram terrorists.

    Noting that the terrorists have been degraded, he said they still carry out suicide bomb attacks against soft targets.

    Fielding questions from reporters after receiving briefing from Service chiefs, Osinbajo said: “ As you know, the Boko Haram as a military force has been degraded. They are not holding territory at the moment. Our armed forces have been able to dislodge them from practically all territories they were holding in the past.

    “What is happening now is just once in a while attack by suicide bombers. By the nature of asymmetric warfare, we are not able to say it has ended now. But I think that militarily they have been contained. There is no question at all that Boko Haram as a fighting force has been degraded.

    “We are still vigilant because of their capacity to do damage with suicide bombers. I am very satisfied with what the military has done so far.   And the briefing has shown graphically that they are really on top of their game and that they are doing excellently well in the Northeast.”

    He explained the fact that he received the security briefing did not mean that President Muhammadu Buhari would not return soon.

    According to him, the security briefings are routine.

    “Besides, the President is a process person and certainly I am going to speak with him here on developments here. So, it is not an indication of anything. It is only an indication that we are committed  to the security of the nation.  The primary duty of government is to ensure lives and properties, and that is why we have to be regularly briefed.

    “The good thing is that our men are going extraordinarily well in the Northeast and that Southern Kaduna has also been contained. The peace building process is also going on very well.”

    Minister of Defence, Mansur Muhammad Dan Ali said: “We have trashed most of the security issues that concerns the country at the meeting, including the Southern Kaduna and the Northeast and other parts of the country.”

    On whether Nigeria is now safe, he said: “Nigeria is very safe and I believe with the concept of the security agencies, all the security challenges have been surmounted.”

  • Why I refused to detonate my explosive – female bomber

    Why I refused to detonate my explosive – female bomber

    A teenager, Amina Yusuf, paraded by the military on Wednesday in Maiduguri said she failed to detonate her explosive because she did not subscribe to Boko Haram ideology.

    The 17-year-old told newsmen in Maiduguri that she was abducted five years ago, alongside her parents, in Madagali in Adamawa, after a terror attack on the village.

    “I was abducted alongside my parents in Madagali in Adamawa after the terrorists attacked our village. We were taken to a camp in the bush where we were forcefully indoctrinated by the group,” she said.

    The suspected suicide bomber alleged that her parents were killed after they had refused to be indoctrinated.

    “My parents were executed because they did not join the group.

    “I was married off to a Boko Haram militant with whom I lived in the camp,” she said.

    “One day I was asked to wear the bombs. I was brought to Maiduguri with an instruction that I detonate the bomb where there is a large crowd of people,” the teenager added.

    She said that she declined to detonate the explosive because she did not want to die.

    “They said I should press the button but I refused and allowed security men to capture me alive.

    “My four siblings are still with the terrorists in the camp,” Yusuf said.

    Maj.- Gen. Lucky Irabor the Theatre Commander of Operation Lafiya Dole had presented her along with two unindentified girls to newsmen during a weekly briefing in Maiduguri.

  • NAF jet destroys Boko Haram anti-aircraft gun

    NAF jet destroys Boko Haram anti-aircraft gun

    In a series of operations aimed at stopping the regrouping of fleeing Boko Haram insurgents, the Nigerian Air Force (NAF) fighter jet on Saturday successfully intercepted a group of Boko Haram Terrorists (BHT) moving in an Hilux vehicle mounted with anti-aircraft gun.

    According to the Director of Public Relations and Information, Group Captain Ayodele Famuyiwa,the armed vehicle was sighted at Talala in Northern Borno by an Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance (ISR) aircraft on patrol, which then called for strike by combat platform.

    Famuyiwa said following the alert, two Alpha Jets were immediately scrambled to the location. “Whereas the insurgents, on sighting the attacking aircraft, fled for cover under nearby trees, the vehicles were attacked and were completely engulfed in an inferno.

    “Follow-up battle damage assessment (BDA) by NAF ISR aircraft revealed that the air strike was successful as the vehicles were completely destroyed as shown by the enclosed declassified footage of the operation.”

    The NAF has intensified ISR missions over the entire theatre of operation in the North East, especially around Northern Borno.

    The objective is to prevent the remnants of the BHT from regrouping with a view to launching attack on own troops on clearance operations as well as people within the host communities.

  • FG will commit significant share of 2017 budget to Northeast – Minister

    The Federal Government will commit a significant share of the 2017 budget to confront the security and humanitarian situation arising from the Boko Haram terrorism in the Northeast, the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Geoffrey Onyeama, has said.

    Onyeama made the remarks on Friday at the Oslo Humanitarian Conference on Nigeria and the Lake Chad Region, according to a statement issued by the Office of the United Nations Secretary-General.

    The minister, however, appealed for the support of the international community to address the huge humanitarian crisis brought about by years of Boko Haram activities in the northeast.

    “The Nigerian Government is committing significant budget to confront the security and humanitarian situation arising from the insurgency.

    “We also need all the help and support we can get from the international community,” Onyeama said.

    The humanitarian conference, hosted by Norway jointly with Nigeria and Germany, generated more than $670 million in pledges.

    The fund would help sustain critical relief operations over the next two years and beyond across the four countries of Nigeria, Cameroon, Chad and Niger, where millions are in need of aid.

    The donors’ forum also agreed on the need to address longer-term development requirements and to seek durable solutions for the crisis-hit countries in the vast region.

    The Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), one of the UN agencies attending the conference, said the humanitarian response efforts to Boko Haram devastations should enable the people to return to a dignified life.

    Dominique Burgeon, Director of FAO Emergency and Rehabilitation Division, in his presentation at the conference in the Norwegian capital, also stressed that aid assistance should focus on providing relief from the looming famine in the region.

    NAN

     

  • Donors pledge $672m for tackling of Boko Haram crisis

    The Oslo Conference on Boko Haram humanitarian crisis realised $672 million in pledges from 14 donors on Friday.

    The spokesperson for the United Nations Secretary-General, Mr. Stephane Dujarric, disclosed this at a press briefing in the Norwegian capital.

    He said the UN Secretary-General, Mr. Antonio Guterres, welcomed the donors’ pledges.

    Dujarric explained that the donors pledged $458 million for 2017 and $214 million for 2018.

    He said, “The Secretary-General welcomes donor pledges made today at the conclusion of the Oslo Humanitarian Conference on Nigeria and the Lake Chad Region,” the spokesman said at the briefing.

    “He stresses the need for sustained support to humanitarian, human rights, development and security needs in the region.

    “14 donors pledged $458 million for 2017 and $214 million for 2018 and beyond.

    “The conference also agreed to address longer-term development needs and seek durable solutions to crises.

    NAN

  • Boko Haram leader Shekau executes group’s spokesman

    Boko Haram leader Shekau executes group’s spokesman

    Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau sensationally announced yesterday he had executed the spokesman for the terror sect -Tasiu who is also known as Abu Zinnira.

    Shekau accused Tasiu and  another senior commander ,Baba Ammar, of plotting to oust him from the terror sect’s leadership.

    He claimed they had been  sending fighters out on  illegal raids, spreading rumours among his lieutenants that he intended to kill them and portraying him as unfit to lead.

     An agency report quoted Shekau as telling an inner circle of his group that “I killed Tasiu .”

    “You should hear me: I killed Tasiu, hear me well,” he told the gathering on December 18,2016.

    The meeting had been called to clear the air over the bad blood apparently sparked within the group by Tasiu’s elimination.

    Shekau, in a 50-minute audio recording of the meeting referred to “those elements grumbling over the killing of Tasiu.”

    Tasiu and “other elements” ,he charged, had tried to portray him to the rank and file as “not on the right track.”

    And he asked:”Tell me, what is the punishment for the people that plot against their leader?”

    “By our code of allegiance, we don’t hesitate to pass appropriate sanction on any one of us that commits an offence.”

    He said nothing about the fate of the “other elements.”

     He branded those opposed to him and his style in the sect as devil’s advocates  who are “at work, trying to instill doubt in the minds of our fighters after realizing we are gathering momentum for real jihad.”

    He added:”They try to confuse whoever they see getting close to me and distance him from me, they are going about dampening the spirit of our fighters.”

    Shekau’s outburst  is a fresh confirmation of division within the sect.

    Last August, the Islamic State group, to which Shekau had pledged allegiance in March 2015, named  Abu Musab Al-Barnawi as now Boko Haram’s leader.

    Barnawi is  the son of  Mohammed Yusuf, founder of Boko Haram.

    His death in police custody in 2009 is cited as the immediate cause of the Boko Haram insurgency which has claimed over 20,000 lives in the Northeast.

    Shekau succeeded Yusuf.

    He rejected the change in leadership and insists he is still in charge of the sect.

    Abu Zinnira appeared in several video recordings of Boko Haram, including one released last August  in which he warned that  the sect would kill the remaining Chibok girls with the insurgents should troops attempt to rescue them.

    Barnawi’s faction has repeatedly accused  Shekau of  high-handedness  and indiscriminate killings of his lieutenants.

    It is also  opposed  to Shekau’s indiscriminate targeting of civilians.

  • How Boko Haram’s sex slaves wind up as sex workers in Europe

    How Boko Haram’s sex slaves wind up as sex workers in Europe

    It’s minutes past 4:00 p.m. local time, and Sarah, as we’ll call her, has just returned to her tent in an Internally Displaced Persons (IDP) camp at the outskirts Maiduguri, the capital of Nigeria’s war-torn Borno state.

    She had spent much of her day in the heart of town meeting with a woman who’s promising to take her to Italy and find her a job. The young girl, who said she was 17, hasn’t been told where she’ll be working once she arrives at her destination. Yet she isn’t bothered. All she wants is to get to Europe.

    Sarah is not naïve. She knows that many of the girls who are taken from Nigeria to Italy end up as sex workers. She even suspects that will be the job she’ll be asked to do once she arrives in Europe, given the way her would-be benefactor has been communicating with her.

    “She always tells me ‘you are a fine girl,’ whenever we are discussing,” she told The Daily Beast at the camp where she has been for about a year now. “She says it wouldn’t be difficult for a girl like me to find a job.”

    Living a life of abuse is what Sarah has faced since 2015, the year Boko Haram militants invaded her compound in Bama, about 50 miles south-east of this city, and dragged her from her home. She says she was taken to the terrorists’ hideout in the Sambisa Forest where a number of jihadists took turns raping her.

    Weeks after her abduction, she escaped from her captors in the middle of the night when those guarding the camp had fallen asleep. She walked for long hours before reaching a settlement from which she was able to make her way to Maiduguri.

    But the difficult life in many IDP camps here, where food is hardly enough for everyone, forced Sarah to turn to prostitution to survive.

    “I was looking for money to feed myself and to buy medicine as I kept falling ill,” she said. “Men don’t give money without first sleeping with you.”

    Reports of female IDPs in Maiduguri prostituting for money and food have been on the rise for months.

    A survey taken last September by NOI Polls, a Nigerian research group, indicated that almost 90 percent of people displaced by Boko Haram in the northeast of the country do not have enough to eat. The survey discovered that many women are trading sex for food and the freedom to move in and out of IDP camps.

    State officials have been accused of stealing food rations, and also of raping and sexually exploiting women and girls living in the IDP camps in Maiduguri.

    NOI Polls reported in the survey that 66 percent of 400 displaced people in the northeast said that camp officials sexually abuse the displaced women and girls.

    Human Rights Watch in a report it released last October, that in July 2016 it documented sexual abuse, including rape and other exploitation of 43 women and girls living in IDP camps in Maiduguri.

    Sarah is one of the many young girls who say they have suffered sexual abuse by men giving out aid in the camp.

    The first time she had sex after arriving in Maiduguri was with a member of the city’s vigilante group who sometimes distributed food to displaced persons.

    “I had to [agree to the man’s advances] because I thought he will stop giving me food if I didn’t.” She said. “He kept putting pressure on me to go to bed with him.”

    After that first incident, Sarah continued to offer sex to those she thought had the money to pay, moving deep into the heart of Maiduguri to look for clients. It was in one of her outings that she met the woman who is promising to take her to Italy.

    “She saw me enter a small restaurant to buy food and then came after me,” Sarah said. “She said she had been seeing me in the area for some time and was monitoring me.”

    While Sarah is excited about travelling to Italy, she is anxious to find out what exact role she’ll be playing once she gets to Europe, and what those helping her achieve expect to gain in return. The teenager is likely to be deceived in the same way thousands of vulnerable girls like her have been tricked in the past.

    Usually, Nigerian women are fooled into believing they’ll be given good jobs once they get to Europe. Often, traffickers take them to traditional shrines where they are forced to undergo a juju oath-swearing ritual that commits them to repay the money they owe to their smugglers on pain of death or insanity, and not to denounce them to the police.

    Once in Europe, the women are told by their benefactors that they must work as prostitutes until they pay off debts ranging from $25,000 to $100,000, according to a number of girls who returned recently to Nigeria after working for years as prostitutes in Italy.

    Should Sarah make it to Italy, she’ll be adding to the over 11,000 women who have crossed the Mediterranean within the last 13 months, of whom 80 percent go on to live a life of forced prostitution, according to the International Organisation for Migration (IOM).

    They journey isn’t easy. The nearly 3,000-mile trip across the Sahel in pick-up trucks, in minivans and on motorcycles that will take Sarah to Libya’s Mediterranean coast usually takes months to complete, and migrants on this route face possible beatings, rape, and forced labour by criminal networks in North Africa (PDF). At the end of it, not everyone seeking to reach Europe is successful.

    Recently, over a hundred female migrants voluntarily returned to Nigeria after being detained for several months in Libya by border authorities as they tried to get to Italy. Some of the returnees said they were abused by Libyan immigration officials while in detention. It took the intervention of the IOM for them to be freed returned home.

    “Most of the young ladies in detention camp were raped by Libyan officials,” Bridget Akeama, who returned from Libya four months pregnant, reportedly told the News Agency of Nigeria. “If you refused their advances, it will be hell for you.”

    Nearly all the women who arrived at the Lagos airport come from southern Nigeria, a predominantly Christian region that has for years been a hub for smugglers taking advantage of girls desperately in need of “lucrative” jobs. Figures show that 80 percent of women trafficked to Italy come from Benin City, Edo State, in the same region.

    But Sarah’s impending move to Italy is an indication that traffickers have created a solid base in the northeast region where an eight-year-old insurgency has created a huge refugee crisis and made thousands of women vulnerable.

    Stories of trafficking of women displaced by the Boko Haram insurgency began to circulate more than two years ago when the jihadists seized a part of northeast Nigeria about the size of Belgium, forcing hundreds of thousands people to flee to overcrowded IDP camps in relatively calm cities. The vulnerability of these women and poor structuring of these camps created an opening for traffickers to explore.

    A report by Nigeria’s Abuja-based International Centre for Investigative Reporting (ICIR) published in 2015 alleged that hundreds of young girls have been trafficked from IDP camps, although most victims were from unregistered, makeshift camps established when official camps could no longer cope.

    The report quoted an unnamed nurse as saying many children were brought to her hospital after being raped in the IDP camps, and it also alleged that refugees were being sold as unpaid domestic workers, raped repeatedly, and in some cases burned and wounded with knives.

    One of the patients admitted to the hospital was a 15-year-old girl who said some government officials came to the camp she stayed in and took many young girls away and later sold them as slaves. She ended up in the house of a man whose brother repeatedly raped her.

    As IDP camps offer little protection to inhabitants, there is growing concern that more young girls like Sarah will be exploited, a major concern for aid organisations and for the United Nations, which is offering extensive help in the region.

    “Many [camps] are in fact the settings for violence, exploitation and abuse of the most vulnerable,” Chaloka Beyani, UN Special Rapporteur on the human rights of internally displaced persons, said in a statement at the end of his visit to Nigeria last year. “The situation of women and girls in IDP camps and conflict affected areas is of particular concern and requires urgent action.”

    By Philip Obaji Jr.

    He is a human rights educator and children’s rights advocate, is the winner of the 2014 Future Awards Africa Prize in Education and 2015 Future Awards Africa Prize for Young Person of the Year. He was listed among 100 most influential people in Nigeria in 2016 by an online news magazine, YNaija.

  • Reversing Boko Haram destruction requires joint efforts – Norway

    Reversing the complex humanitarian crises caused by Boko Haram terrorists in Northeast Nigeria and the Lake Chad Basin requires joint efforts, Norway’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, Børge Brende, has said.

    Brende, in his opening remarks on Friday at the international donor conference in Oslo for Nigeria and the Lake Chad region, pledged that the humanitarian crises in the area would be tackled together.

    He said, “We are here to address the severe humanitarian situation in northeastern Nigeria and the Lake Chad region.

    “We aim at mobilising increased humanitarian support and enhancing longer-term development cooperation. Our goal should be to provide stability and growth in a troubled region.

    “Many of today’s major challenges – terrorism, climate change, migration, extreme poverty – are too big for any one country to handle alone. We can only effectively deal with these issues together.

    “For decades, people in this region have struggled with poverty and the harsh effects of climate change. Boko Haram’s terror caused a displacement crisis. Now it has become a severe food and nutrition crisis.

    “We must act now, jointly, to tackle this complex humanitarian crisis, avoid famine in Nigeria and the Lake Chad region, and secure long-term development that builds resilience.

    “More than 10 million people are in need of humanitarian assistance. Seven million experience food insecurity.

    “More than 1200 schools are damaged or destroyed. Three million children need educational assistance.

    “The dire situation cannot be addressed by development assistance alone.”

    NAN