Tag: boko haram

  • Boko Haram crippled can no longer take territory – Buhari

    Boko Haram crippled can no longer take territory – Buhari

    President Muhammadu Buhari said yesterday that  the Boko Haram terrorists have been degraded to the extent that the group can no longer seize and hold on to any territory in the country.

    In a speech delivered on his behalf at the 13th summit of the Organisation of Islamic Countries (OIC) in Istanbul, Turkey by Education Minister, Adamu Adamu, Buhari said government forces had taken over all the territories hitherto under the control of the insurgents, and destroyed their camps.

    The president also said that most of the leaders of the terrorist group had been arrested, while many others had surrendered.

    He commended Nigeria’s neighbouring countries, Niger, Chad, Cameroon and Benin and the international community for their support in the fight against insurgency in the country.

    Buhari also commended the OIC for its efforts in ensuring peace worldwide.

    On the theme of the summit: “Unity and Solidarity for Justice and Peace,” Buhari described the current precarious situation in the Muslim world as a source of great concern.

    “A multiplicity of crises and conflicts litter the entire landscape of the Muslim World – from West and North Africa through Central Asia to the Indian subcontinent; from Jammu and Kashmir to Jakarta,” he said.

    “And from the Arabian Peninsula and the Near East to the Balkans; many member-states are embroiled in conflicts threatening their very existence and taking an unacceptable toll in human lives and destruction of critical infrastructure.

    “Muslim minorities in non-member-states like Myammar, Philippines, Thailand and China; and Muslim migrants in the West are still facing serious political, cultural and economic challenges or outright persecution.”

    He therefore called on member-states of the organization to rededicate themselves to the struggle for peace and justice for Palestinians.

    He said that Nigeria stood in full solidarity with the Palestinians in their legitimate quest for an independent state. “The situation in Palestine remains bleak; the scourge of terrorism and violent extremism remains unabated.

    “The drums of Islamaphobia, especially in the countries with minority or migrant Muslims, are being beaten to achieve mischievous political objectives.

    “Nigeria identifies with and fully supports the just struggle of the people of Palestine against the unjust occupation of their land and the oppression of their people by Israel,” he said.

     

  • We stand with Nigeria in battle against Boko Haram -UK

    We stand with Nigeria in battle against Boko Haram -UK

    The United Kingdom said yesterday it was firmly behind Nigeria in the ongoing war against the terror sect, Boko Haram.

    UK Minister for International Development, Nick Hurd,  told News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja that Nigeria “matters a great deal to us,” adding: “even my Prime Minister has made it very clear that we stand shoulder to shoulder with Nigeria in the battle against Boko Haram.

    “We understand how many thousands and millions of peoples’ lives have been devastated by the atrocities in the North East. We are determined to help our own friend and partner to defeat that barbaric group.”

    For now, much of UK’s support, according to him, comes in form of training and capacity building in the military.

    He said that his country was pleased with the successes so far recorded by the military against Boko Haram insurgents recently.

    On the kidnapped Chibok schoolgirls, Hurd said UK was always supportive of the determination to ensure the safe return of the girls but challenged Nigeria to lead the girls’ rescue.

    “My Prime Minister, the British Government and the British people are fully supportive of the determination to bring the girls home.

    “They have empathy with that but this (rescue) needs to be led by the Nigerian government, there has to be a Nigerian solution to this. I made it clear to the Vice-President that we will help but we are going to follow a Nigerian lead,” he said.

    On a report that the UK knew the whereabouts of the girls, Hurd said: “My information is constrained by the fact that I’m International Development Minister. I’m not into greater deal into the military intelligence cooperation. I don’t have a full answer to that question.”

    On the humanitarian assistance, the envoy said that UK was increasing its commitment with another 33 million pounds.

    He said the increased fund was informed by the assessment that was carried out about the needs in the north eastern part of the country which were around nutrition, food and protection.

    He said UK was interested in the stability and real development of the region and called on the international community to be more effective in its response.

     

  • Boko Haram: Yobe, Army re-open Damaturu-Biu federal road

    Yobe Government in collaboration with the Nigerian Army on Saturday reopened the 132km Damaturu-Biu federal road, which was blocked three years ago by Boko Haram insurgents.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the road, which was a major link between Yobe and southern part of Borno, was inaugurated at Buni Yadi.

    Lt.-Gen. Tukur Buratai, Chief of Army Staff, said at the occasion that the road was strategic to the economic well being of Yobe as it linked the state capital with many communities.

    He said reopening of the road would boost economic activities of Yobe, Borno, Adamawa and Gombe State.

    “This will also impact positively on the current military operations in the area by boosting the achievement of the troops,” he said.

    Buratai charged the Yobe government to accelerate work on the reconstruction of the road to encourage vibrant economic activities.

    Yobe Governor, Alhaji Ibrahim Geidam, in his speech, commended the army and other security agencies for restoring peace in the state.

    Geidam, represented by the Commissioner for Works, Alhaji Sirajo Wakil, assured that the state government would reconstruct the road.

    The governor said the state government would liaise with the army engineering corps to reconstruct the road.

  • We stand with Nigeria in battle against Boko Haram –UK

    The United Kingdom (UK) says it is supporting Nigeria in the ongoing war against the Boko Haram insurgents.

    UK Minister for International Development, Nick Hurd, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja that UK had a very long cordial relationship with Nigeria.

    “The very long partnership between UK and Nigeria matters a great deal to us; even my Prime Minister has made it very clear that we stand shoulder to shoulder with Nigeria in the battle against Boko Haram.

    “We understand how many thousands and millions of peoples’ lives have been devastated by the atrocities in the North East.

    “We are determined to help our own friend and partner to defeat that barbaric group,’’ he said.

    Hurd said at the moment, the UK’s support took the form of a big commitment to training and capacity building in the military.

    He said that his country was pleased with the successes so far recorded by the military against Boko Haram insurgents recently.

    On the kidnapped Chibok schoolgirls, Hurd said UK was always supportive of the determination to ensure the safe return of the girls but challenged Nigeria to lead the girls’ rescue.

    “My Prime Minister, the British Government and the British people are fully supportive of the determination to bring the girls home.

    “They have empathy with that but this (rescue) needs to be led by the Nigerian government, there has to be a Nigerian solution to this.

    “I made it clear to the Vice-President that we will help but we are going to follow a Nigerian lead,’’ he said.

    On a report that the UK knew the whereabouts of the girls, Hurd said: “My information is constrained by the fact that I’m International Development Minister.
    “I’m not into greater deal into the military intelligence cooperation. I don’t have a full answer to that question.’’

    On the humanitarian assistance, the envoy said that UK was increasing its commitment with another 33 million pounds.

    He said the increased fund was informed by the assessment that was carried out about the needs in the north eastern part of the country which were around nutrition, food and protection.

    He said UK was interested about the stability and real development of the region and called on the international community to be more effective in its response.(NAN)

  • Boko Haram: UK set to support Nigeria’s humanitarian, energy needs with £32m

    Boko Haram: UK set to support Nigeria’s humanitarian, energy needs with £32m

    United Kingdom (UK) has concluded arrangement to provide additional funding up to £32 million for humanitarian and energy support to the country.

    The sum, according to UK Minister for International Development, Nick Hued, is in addition to more than £8.2 million provided by the UK since 2014.

    Hued noted that the humanitarian needs in the North East are enormous and growing.

    UK, he stressed, was committed to continuing to help Nigeria to provide humanitarian assistance and protection for people affected by the conflict in the North East.

    The support, which would be for the next three years, is aimed at delivering basic life-saving assistance and protection to some of the estimated seven million people in need of humanitarian assistance due to the conflict in the region.

    While also commending Nigeria’s efforts to support the affected population, Hued maintained that a sustained, large scale government-led response is needed to meet people’s basic needs and help them to rebuild their lives once security conditions allow them to return to their places of origin.

    He further assured the country of UK’s continuing support alongside its partners to strengthen the humanitarian effort to reach the most vulnerable, many of whom are in areas that are difficult to access.

    A statement issued by the British High Commission in Abuja said the funds will be channeled through the United Nations (UN), the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and other humanitarian organisations, and will be used to provide support for critical life-saving areas including nutrition, food security, water and sanitation, and protection of civilians affected by the conflict.

  • Bring Back Our Girls – UN speaks out

    Bring Back Our Girls – UN speaks out

    Two years ago 276 girls were abducted by Boko Haram militants from a school in Chibok, in Borno State, Nigeria. To date, only a handful of them have come back.

    I stand in outrage and solidarity with their families, demanding their return.

    These girls are not alone – thousands of others have been taken over the years before and after Chibok, subjected to unspeakable terror and brutality. They have been forced to marry Boko Haram fighters and live in sexual slavery. Many may have been trafficked across borders and sold. Horrifically, some have been turned into weapons against their own communities, sent back as suicide bombers to inflict maximum fear and casualties in markets and other public spaces.

    Many of those who have managed to escape have come back pregnant or with children. But instead of being welcomed, they and their children are often marginalised and ostracised, shunned by families and neighbours, viewed with suspicion and labeled as “Boko Haram wives and babies”.

    I urge the Nigerian authorities to redouble efforts to find and liberate the Chibok girls and so many others who have been abducted, and to provide health, psychological and trauma services for those who do manage to return. I also call on religious and traditional leaders to play a role to ensure that women and girls are treated with compassion and accepted back in their communities, and to shift the stigma of sexual violence from the victims to the perpetrators. We all have a sacred duty of care for these girls.

    Sexual violence is central to the ideology and strategy of terrorist groups like Boko Haram, who use it as an incentive for recruitment and fundraising among other core objectives. Therefore, we must also place the protection and empowerment of women and girls at the center of global, regional and national strategies to counter violent extremism.

  • Boko Haram: UK supports Nigeria with £32m

    Boko Haram: UK supports Nigeria with £32m

    United Kingdom (UK) has concluded arrangement to provide additional funding up to £32 million for humanitarian and energy support to the country.

    This new funding, according to Nick Hurd, the UK Minister for International Development, is in addition to more than £8.2 million provided by the UK since 2014.

    Hued noted that the humanitarian needs in north east Nigeria are enormous and growing.

    UK he stressed was committed to continuing to help Nigeria to provide humanitarian assistance and protection for people affected by the conflict in north east Nigeria.

    The support which is for the next three years is aimed at delivering basic, life-saving assistance and protection to some of the estimated 7 million people in need of humanitarian assistance due to the conflict in north east Nigeria.

    While also commending Nigeria’s efforts to support the affected population, Hurd maintained that a sustained, large-scale Government-led response is needed to meet people’s basic needs and to help them to rebuild their lives once security conditions allow them to return to their places of origin.

    He further assured the country of UK’s continuing support alongside its partners to strengthen the humanitarian effort to reach the most vulnerable, many of whom are in areas that are difficult to access.

    A statement issued by the British High Commission in Abuja said that the funds will be channeled through the United Nations (UN), the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and other humanitarian organisations, and will be used to provide support for critical life-saving areas including nutrition, food security, water and sanitation, and protection of civilians affected by the conflict.

    Also, Technical expertise is expected to be made available to the Government of Nigeria to support the humanitarian response.

    In addition, the Minister, according to the statement also announced a substantial increase of £16.7 million pounds the UK is giving to Nigeria’s rapidly growing solar energy market.  The additional funding is in support of a UK sponsored Solar Nigeria Programme that was approved in September 2013 with a budget of £37.1 million pounds.

    The UK’s overall £222 million / year programme in Nigeria improves health and education systems, addresses malnutrition, improves governance, removes the constraints to growth and helps Nigeria better target its own resources.  Over 60% of DFID Nigeria’s programme is targeted at northern Nigeria where the needs are greatest

     

  • That CNN’s video of Chibok Girls

    That CNN’s video of Chibok Girls

    International broadcaster, CNN certainly wowed its global audience with the video it exclusively obtained of Nigeria’s abducted schoolgirls by Boko Haram terrorists on April 14, 2014 to the consternation of the entire world.

    As would be expected in any situation where one has expended resources to acquire such valuable media, the news organisation milked it for all it was worth and had the foresight to have arranged a screening for grieving parents of the abducted girls. If the footage of the distraught mothers groveling as they pleaded for the release of the children didn’t force the hands of the government to go in search of the girls then maybe nothing will. Perhaps, that CNN’s exclusive will finally force the Nigerian authorities to seek closure in this case.

    As heart breaking as those images are, they raise questions that all those involved should provide answers to if the misery of these little girls is not to be released to mere movie prop that matters only to the point of boosting viewership and growing ratings.
    For a start, how come, as usual, none of the indigenous media houses were smart or daring enough to obtain the video? Of course the argument would be made later that they are lazy and without initiative and the enterprise needed to nail such an exclusive.
    The video was shot sometimes around last Christmas from the analysis provided by CNN, how long has the network held unto the video? Why did it opt for now, the second anniversary of the abduction, before airing it? Would it have been better if the video had gone public as soon as it was obtained with the possibility that any potential rescue was sped up relative to that timeframe? There is the fact that there are editorial processes that must be followed before the video is used but was the delay part of a deal struck with the terrorists as a condition for this ‘exclusive’ scoop?
    Protection of sources is a non-negotiable requirement of journalism. This requirement is serious enough that many journalists across the world have rather served prison terms than expose their sources while media organisations would rather bear the cost of expensive litigations than divulge sources. But what is the ethics about withholding information that mean that 219 girls will continue to remain sex slaves with potentials that some of them could get killed in these days of final onslaught on Boko Haram? Is CNN willing to assist the Nigerian authorities by providing information that could lead to the rescue of the girls?
    A natural argument is that the CNN should not compromise ethical standards to assist Nigeria’s law enforcement. Does anyone recall how jail breaking Mexican drug kingpin, Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman was recaptured? Guzman’s recapture was “thanks to a secret meeting with U.S. actor Sean Penn,” according to an article on Al-Jazeera America’s website. The incentive to capture El Chapo was high considering that he was at the root of the epidemic of heroin addiction in the US so ethics or any other consideration would be out of the window naturally.
    Even the ethics of healthcare workers was waived when polio vaccinators were exploited to gather information in Abbottabad, Pakistan, which eventually led to the killing of the then world most wanted terrorist, Osama Bin Laden.

    What then makes the fate of the Chibok Girls different that CNN won’t without prompting furnish information to assist their freedom?

    Could there be a conspiracy to allow Nigeria stew in the mess that the Chibok Girls abduction has been since it first occurred? Does anyone remember who Dr Andrew Pocock is? Dr Andrew Pocock was the former British High Commissioner to Nigeria. Yes, the one who told us when it was well past the time that the United States and the United Kingdom knew the whereabouts of about 80 of abducted Chibok girls but would not intervene? To prevent a scenario where the CNN will claim some months down the line that Nigerian authorities did not approach it for information about this video, the Army should immediately make that request now and hopefully the network would not interpret the request as harassment.

    Additionally, is the CNN willing to give an unedited copy of the video it received to the appropriate authorities in Nigeria perchance the metadata can help to specifically geo-locate where the video was shot? If it turns out the version of the video it received has been stripped of all such markers before being handed over to it what guarantees does it have as to the authenticity of the clips as the terrorists, knowing what content analysis would be done, could have shot the video and made the girls say what they said at any other time in the distant past?

    Beyond the pondering of whether or not CNN will assist the Nigerian Army and government with information that could lead to the rescue of the abducted girls, one must also begin to questions where does it begin and where does it end. How far is too far? When does the receipt of a video footage, celebrated as “exclusive”, move from being legitimate and professional pursuit of stories to running the propaganda wing of a terrorist organisation?

    Agbese is a civil rights activist based in the United Kingdom.

     

  • Fate of Chibok girls remains unknown says UN

    Fate of Chibok girls remains unknown says UN

    The United Nations {UN} on Friday says the plight of 219 Chibok schoolgirls who were abducted two years ago is a major conflict that is affecting the North-Eastern communities.

    Fatma Samoura UN Humanitarian Coordinator for Nigeria said that up to 7,000 women and girls might be living in abduction and sex slavery.

    “Humanitarian agencies are concerned that two years have passed, and still the fate of the Chibok girls and the many, many other abductees is unknown,” she said.

    The statement quoted Samoura as saying that the abducted girls had suffered so much at the hands of their captors as they had been on forced recruitment, forced marriage, sexual slavery and rape, and have been used to carry bombs.

    “Between 2,000 and 7,000 women and girls are living in abduction and sex slavery,” said Jean Gough, Country Representative of the UN Children’s Fund, UNICEF.

    Women and girls, who have escaped Boko Haram have reported undergoing a systematic training programme to train them as bombers, according to UNICEF.

    It said that 85 per cent of the suicide attacks by women globally in 2014 were in Nigeria.

    In May 2015, it was reported that children had been used to perpetrate three-quarters of all suicide attacks in Nigeria since 2014.

    Many of the bombers had been brainwashed or coerced.

    As the Nigerian military recaptures territory from Boko Haram, abducted women and girls are being recovered.

    Over and above the horrific trauma of sexual violence these girls experienced during their captivity, many are now facing rejection by their families and communities, because of their association with Boko Haram.

    “You are a Boko Haram wife, don’t come near us,” one girl reported being told.

    “Effective rehabilitation for these women and girls is vital, as they rebuild their lives,’’ the statement said.

     

    The UN notes that children have suffered disproportionately as a result of the conflict.

    The Chibok abduction was not an isolated incident.

    In November 2014, 300 children were abducted from a school in Damasak, Borno, and are still missing.

    A UNICEF report, released earlier this week, states that 1.3 million children have been displaced by the conflict across the Lake Chad Basin, almost a million of whom are in Nigeria.

    Similarly, Human Rights Watch House reported that 1 million children had lost access to education.

    “The abducted Chibok girls have become a symbol for every girl that has gone missing at the hands of Boko Haram, and every girl who insists on practicing her right to education,” said Munir Safieldin, Deputy Humanitarian Coordinator for Nigeria.

    The UN says more need to be done by the Nigerian government and the international community to keep them safe from the horrors other women and girls have endured.

    Safe schools are a good start, but safe roads and safe homes are also needed, it says.

  • Chibok girls: Senate summons NSA, other security chiefs

    Chibok girls: Senate summons NSA, other security chiefs

    The Senate Thursday resolved to invite the National Security Adviser (NSA), Babagana Monguno and other security chiefs to brief it on their efforts to secure the release of the Chibok school girls.

    The upper chamber also commended the Bring Back Our Girls group for their doggedness in the campaign for the release of the Chibok girls.

    It asked security agencies to do everything humanly possible to ensure that release of the girls.

    The resolutions followed the adoption of a motion by Senator Dino Melaye (Kogi West) and three others entitled “Abduction of Chibok school girls-two years after.”

    The motion elicited angry reactions from Senators who felt that two years was long enough for the government to have recovered the school girls.

    Senator Melaye lamented the plight of the girls and their parents.

    He insisted that the Federal Government cannot be said to have succeeded until the girls are rescued.

    He said: “We cannot succeed as a government until those girls are released. Getting back the over 200 Chibok school girls into the society is important and a must for our security agencies.

    “The abduction of over 200 girls by Boko Haram has wrongly affected us as a people as could be seen in the international condemnation of the government’s slow reaction to this unprecedented outrage committed against Nigerian womanhood. Never before has such criminal viciousness been perpetrated on Nigerian womanhood.”

    Melaye noted that Thursday “makes it 730 days, 17520 hours and 1,051 minutes that our Chibok school girls have been under captivity. It will be recalled the night of 14-15 April, 2014, 276 girls were kidnapped from Government Secondary School, Chibok, Borno State, the responsibility for the abduction was claimed by Boko Haram. Luckily, 57 of the school girls managed to escape making 219 still missing.”

    He said that outside propaganda videos created by the Islamist militant group, none of the girls has been seen and the families of the missing girls have been traumatized because of their daughters.

    Senate Minority Leader, Godswill Akpabio, in his contribution said that Melaye and some other members of the All Progressives Congress (APC) used the abduction of the Chibok school girls to win last year’s general elections.

    Akpabio wondered why those who led protests against the government of former President Goodluck Jonathan to rescue the girls have suddenly kept mum.

    He said, “I remember in 2014, Dino Melaye used to wear T-shirt and he led the protest to ensure that the abducted school girls were released.

    “He was always at the National Fountain to lead a protest against the government. He eventually cashed in on it and won election to the Senate. Other people in APC also did the same thing.”

    Former President Jonathan came under local and international attack over the way and manner the government handled the issue of the abducted school girls.

    Jonathan was accused of playing politics with the rescue of the girls.

    At last year’s general elections, President Muhammadu Buhari who was the presidential candidate of APC, promised to rescue the girls two months into his government.

    The government has insisted that it does not know the whereabouts of the girls and when they will be rescued.

    Some other Senators, who also supported the motion, asked the federal government to go beyond the yearly ritual of celebrating the anniversary of the abduction of the girls.

    The lawmakers said the government should explore every available avenue to ensure that the girls are rescued.