Tag: boko haram

  • Boko Haram: Kabiru Sokoto accuses Fed Govt of frustrating his appeal

    Boko Haram: Kabiru Sokoto accuses Fed Govt of frustrating his appeal

    Convicted Boko Haram member Kabiru Umar (also known as Kabiru Sokoto) has accused agents of the Federal Government of frustrating his efforts to appeal his conviction and sentence.

    He was, on December 20, 2013, sentenced to life imprisonment by Justice Adeniyi Ademola of the Federal High Court, Abuja, in connection with the 2011 Christmas Day blast that killed about 44 persons and injured 75 at St. Theresa’s Catholic Church, Madalla, Niger State.

    Dissatisfied, Sokoto filed a notice of appeal before the Court of Appeal, Abuja.

    The applicant, in a fresh motion on notice filed at the Federal High Court, Abuja, by his lawyer, Sheriff Okoh, alleged that the Comptroller of Prisons and his men made it impossible for him to access his lawyer, to enable him perfect his appeal process.

    In the motion, which has the Comptroller General of Prisons (CGP) and Attorney General of the Federation (AGF) as respondents, Sokoto, who is held at the Kirikiri Maximum Security Prison, Lagos, seeks an order compelling the respondents to allow him access to his lawyer.

    He also seeks a declaration that the respondents’ alleged decision to deny him access to his lawyer was a violation of his right to fair hearing, right to counsel and access to justice.

    In a supporting affidavit deposed to by Okoh, it was alleged that the several applications to the CGP by Sokoto’s lawyer for opportunity to see him had always been turned down.

    Yesterday, when the case was called, Justice Nnamdi Dimgba observed that there was no evidence in the court’s file that the respondents were served with court processes.

    He directed the applicant’s lawyer to ensure service of the processes on the respondents and return on February 4 for the hearing of the motion.

  • ‎Boko Haram: Kabiru Sokoto accuses FG of frustrating his appeal

    ‎Boko Haram: Kabiru Sokoto accuses FG of frustrating his appeal

    Convicted Boko Haram member, Kabiru Umar (also known as Kabiru Sokoto) has accused agents of the Federal Government of frustrating his efforts to appeal his conviction and sentence.

    Sokoto was on December 20, 2013 sentenced to life imprisonment by Justice Adeniyi Ademola of the Federal High Court, Abuja in connection with 2011 Christmas day bomb blast that killed about 44 persons and wounded 75 others at St. Theresa’s Catholic Church, Madalla, Niger State.

    Justice Ademola had, in his judgment, held that he was satisfied that the Federal Government, successfully established the culpability of the convict beyond every reasonable doubt, noting that Umar had in two earlier separate confessional statements, admitted that he had prior knowledge of the attack.

    The judge noted that Sokoto never showed any remorse for his actions throughout the trial, and described him (Sokoto) as “a pathological liar with no regards for the truth.”

    Dissatisfied, Sokoto filed a notice of appeal before the Court of Appeal, Abuja.

    In a fresh motion on notice filed before the Federal High Court, Abuja by his lawyer, Sheriff Okoh, Sokoto alleged the Comptroller of Prisons and his men have made it impossible to access his lawyer, to enable him perfect his appeal process.

    The motion, which has The Comptroller General of Prisons (CGP) and Attorney General of the Federation (AGF) as respondents, Sokoto, now being held at the Kirikiri Maximum Security Prison, Lagos, wants an order compelling the respondents to allow him access to his lawyer.

    He also seeks a declaration that the respondents’s alleged decision to deny him access to his lawyer was a violation of his right to fair hearing, right to counsel and access to justice.

    In a supporting affidavit deposed to by Okoh, it was alleged that the several applications to the CGP by Sokoto’s lawyer for opportunity to see him had always been turned down.

    “We have made several person contacts with the 1st defendant (CGP), his men: S. N. Nwanchukwu (PSO), E. O. Ogundele) DCG) among others, at the Nigeria Prisons headquarters, Abuja in a bid to persuade them to permit us to see the applicant, but they kept making us indulge in fruitless returns for approvals from the 2nd respondent (AGF) that has not come for over two years.

    “Wherefore, we verily believe that their actions are aimed at ensuring that the applicant’s appeal of his conviction and sentence continues to be frustrated in perpetuity.

    “The applicant’s appeal before the Court of Appeal is being delayed as a result of the conduct of the 1st respondent and men under his command and supervision,” Okoh said.

    Thursday, when the case was called, the trial judge, Justice Nnamdi Dimgba observed that there was no evidence in court’s file that the respondents were served with processes (court documents) in the case.

    He directed the applicant’s lawyer to ensure service of the processes on the respondents and return on February 4 for the hearing of the motion.

     

     

  • U.S condemns Chibok town suicide attacks

    U.S condemns Chibok town suicide attacks

    United States has condemned in strong terms Wednesday suicide bombing in Chibok.

    27 lives were lost in the multiple suicide attacks.

    According to a terse statement issued by the embassy in Abuja, ‎US reiterated it’s support for Nigeria in the fight against terrorism.

    The statement reads: “The U.S. Embassy condemns the multiple suicide attacks against the Chibok community on January 27.  We extend our deepest condolences to the families of then victims.

    “The United States remains committed to supporting Nigeria’s fight against these senseless acts of terror.”

     

  • Boko Haram: Army reopens case of personnel desertion

    Boko Haram: Army reopens case of personnel desertion

    Seven officers including a Brigadier General, two Colonels and four Lieutenant Colonels appeared before the Nigerian Army Court Martial held in Lagos Tuesday.

    The army officers that appeared at the court martial are – Gen. J.O. Komolafe, Colonels I.B. Maina and I.A. Aboi, Lieutenant Colonels N.N. Orok, C.A. Magaji, A.O. Agwu and O.O. Obolo,

    The officers were among the initial 22 whose trial commenced in 2014 at the Nine Brigade, for alleged desertion and cowardice in the fight against Boko Haram sect.

    They are also being tried for alleged negligence and complicity in the invasion of the 21 Artillery Brigade, Bama, by Boko Haram insurgents on September 2, 2014.

    Also standing trial before the Court Martial is a soldier, whose identity could not be ascertained.

    Although the court martial suffered several adjournments, it was learnt that the cases of 14 officers- Colonels A. Laguda, V. Ebhaleme, V.O. Ita, I.M Kabir, M.H. Abubakar, A. A. Egbejule, A.J.S. Gulani, A.M. Adetuyi; Major M.M Idris; Captains M. Adamu, O. A. Adenaike, M. Gidado, M.M. Clark and S. Raymond as well as a Second Lieutenant, S.O. Olowa- have been decided.

    Since inception, journalists have been barred from covering the trial, which usually held under tight security.

    Confirming the development, Col. Kingsley Samuel said: “The court martial resumed sitting on Monday, January 25, to continue hearing cases of seven officers and a soldier.

    “This is against erroneous news reports that 19 officers of the Nigerian Army are facing trial at the court martial.

    “The case was part-heard and now the court martial board has continued to hear the case. This is not a fresh court martial but a continuation of the former one.”

     

  • Whither Boko Haram?

    January 25, 2015, and The Telegraph of UK’s report on Boko Haram:  “Militants from Nigeria’s Boko Haram have attacked Maiduguri, the biggest city in the country’s Northeast, with residents reporting heavy gunfire and shelling from early on Sunday morning and dozens of combatants are said to have been killed.

    “… Maiduguri is the capital of Borno State and would be a major prize for the insurgents, who already control large areas of the state and key border crossings into neighbouring Cameroon, Niger and Chad…”

    Chilling excerpts that gave the not incredulous impression that Boko Haram, the murderous, bloodthirsty and deranged Islamist group, was here to stay and do as it wished!

    January 25, 2016, and a report from Nigeria’s Daily Sun: “Suspected Boko Haram insurgents have launched a deadly attack in Adamawa State, raiding six villages in Girei Local Government of Adamawa State and leaving at least 15 people dead.  The attack came in the wake of President Muhammadu Buhari’s assertion that the war on Boko Haram has been significantly won and gave assurances that everything possible would be done to keep the terrorists away from reclaimed villages.

    Media reports “… said that there was an exchange of gunfire between the Nigerian military and the attackers who were forced to retreat into the bushes.”

    Exactly one year later.  So, is  Boko Haram alive and well?  Not quite.

    For one, the frontal attacks on big towns and cities, with the anarchists thumping their noses against Nigeria’s much-vaunted federal might has fizzled out.  So has the lunatic boasts of Abubakar Shekau or his corresponding ghosts, as he bobbed up from yes-he’s-dead-no-he’s-not-dead sickening tales from the Goodluck Jonathan presidency, and its army high command.

    But the threat seems to have retreated to the pristine hit-and-run guerrilla tactics, of Boko Haram’s battle-entry strategy, before it was allowed to festered by an apologetic and hesitating presidency.  That a DPO reportedly lost his life in the Adawama attack echos those dire beginnings, when Boko Haram on Okada would attack police posts, kill luckless policemen in there and set free detainees in the facilities’ cells.

    Yet, between January 2015 and January 2016, Boko Haram has been so heavily degraded that  talks about mass resettlement of the thousands of internally displaced persons (IDPs) don’t sound so fantastic and far-fetched again.

    If Hardball were even to be more date-dramatic, he would insist that in seven months, a sure-footed and determined government has all but checkmated a seven-year insurgency, that looked like raging undeterred for no less than another seven years, at the very least!

    But if the media remains sceptical at President Buhari’s claim that the war against Boko Haram had been substantially won, it is because humans are basically pain-avoiding; a traumatised people, even more so.  That would explain the seeming waywardness and obduracy of the Biblical Israelites who, after being saved from Egyptian tyranny, en route to the promised land, would forget the last celestial munificence, no matter how grand, and scream at Jehovah to return them to Egypt, rather kill them all in the desert between Egypt and Canaan.

    Of course, the 15 killed in the latest Adamawa attack are humans with flesh and blood, families and loved ones.  They are not just mere stats to be compared and discounted.  That means the war won’t be fully won, until every inch of Nigerian territory is safe from Boko Haram’s plague.

    Still, Nigerians cannot afford to be as obdurate and stiff-necked as the Israelites of old.  We should applaud the government to more success, when it is doing well, just as we reserve the right to excoriate it, when it falters.

    On Boko Haram, the Buhari Presidency has done well.  But it should not rest until those blood-sucking criminals are totally sacked from our land.

  • 25 killed in Cameroon suicide bombing

    Four suicide bombers killed about 25 people in a village in Cameroon’s Far North region on Monday, a local official said, the most deadly in a string of recent attacks in an area beset by violence connected to Boko Haram sect.

    Two bombers struck the Bodo central market, while others hit the town’s main entrance and exit points, the official said.

    “There was a quadruple suicide bombing in the village of Bodo this morning. There are around 25 deaths and several wounded,” he told Reuters.

    There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack.

    Cameroonian troops form part of an 8,700-strong regional force created to defeat Boko Haram, which has waged a six-year campaign to carve out a separate state in northeastern Nigeria.

    Boko Haram has stepped up attacks outside Nigeria over the past year, including in Cameroon, Chad and Niger, threatening regional security.

    Monday’s bombing was not the first time the town of Bodo has been targeted. At the end of December, two female suicide bombers blew themselves up at the town’s entrance.

     

  • UNHCR seeks US$545 million for Nigeria, CAR crises

    UNHCR seeks US$545 million for Nigeria, CAR crises

    The United Nations Refugee Agency (UNHCR) and its partners have called on donor nations for more than half-a-billion US dollars this year to help hundreds of thousands of people forced to flee conflicts in Nigeria and the Central African Republic (CAR) and the host communities providing them with shelter and other basic services.

    The two Regional Refugee Response Plans (RRRP), presented at a donor briefing in Yaoundé, Cameroon, on Monday include US$198.76 million for 230,000 Nigerian refugees and another 284,300 members of host communities in Niger, Chad and Cameroon as well as US$345.7 million for 476,300 CAR refugees and some 289,000 people hosting them in Chad, Cameroon, Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) and Republic of Congo.

    Both RRRPs cover needs in sectors such as protection, education, food security, health and nutrition, livelihoods, shelter, basic aid and water, hygiene and sanitation. The CAR appeal is being made by 25 organizations, including UNHCR and other UN agencies as well as NGOs.

    The Nigeria appeal is made by 28 organizations. UNHCR alone is seeking US$189.54 million under the Central African Republic RRRP and US$62.33 million for Nigeria.

    “These two humanitarian crises must not be forgotten; they are not going away. The suffering is great and the needs acute among both the displaced and host communities,” said Liz Ahua, UNHCR’s Regional Refugee Coordinator for the CAR and Nigeria situations.

    Ahua said violence occurs on almost a daily basis in North-East Nigeria and CAR, generating fear and new displacement in the region, citing as examples suicide attacks, kidnapping, indiscriminate killings and massive human rights abuses.

    “There is light at the end of the tunnel, but we won’t see it unless there is a much stronger commitment from African governments and the international community to help re-establish stability and peace,” Ahua said, urging donors to give more generously.

    In 2015, the Nigerian RRRP received 52 per cent of its financial requirements whilst the Central African Republic RRRP received just 27 per cent.

    Despite important steps towards restoring peace in both North-East Nigeria and CAR, there were also reverses and continuing significant population displacement in 2015. In Nigeria, the government rolled back Boko Haram gains, but the insurgent group turned to terror tactics that spread into neighbouring countries.

    In CAR, relative peace was punctuated by waves of violence that triggered flight within the country and into the DRC, but the first round of the presidential election passed peacefully in late December with the participation of tens of thousands of refugees in Chad, Republic of Congo and Cameroon. The second round is due in February.

    The crises in Nigeria and CAR will continue to provide major challenges throughout 2016 in countries such as Cameroon, which provides sanctuary and assistance to refugees from both Nigeria and CAR.

    For just this country, the appeals seek US$130.8 million to help 234,500 CAR refugees and almost 216,700 host community members and US$56.36 million for 100,000 Nigerian refugees and 20,000 hosts in Cameroon.

    Highlighting some of the needs, Ahua said: “We need funding to prevent malnutrition among children; to run schools, build up proper sanitation systems and provide clean water; and to make sure that families have shelter over their heads.”

    The Nigeria and CAR regional response plans are part of the wider 2016 humanitarian appeal, asking for US$20.1 billion to reach 87 million people around the world, launched last December.

  • 7000 residents return home after Boko Haram ouster

    7000 residents return home after Boko Haram ouster

    About 7, 000 Nigerians evicted from their Gomboru Ngala homes in Borno State by the Boko Haram insurgency have returned after almost one and a half years of exile in neighbouring Cameroon.

    On hand to receive them was the Chairman of the Local Government, Alhaji Abdulrahman Abdulkarim,  who distributed relief materials to them.

    A similar gesture was extended to those still taking refuge in Fotokol, Cameroon.

    Each family was given a bag of rice, grain, oil and condiment.

    Abdulkarim described the situation in Gamboru as pathetic with many houses burnt and uninhabitable.

    Most of the returnees are currently being accommodated by those whose houses survived the Boko Haram onslaught.

    “Although almost all our homes are burnt but they agreed to share houses with their neighbors and they are ready to protect themselves  from any attack,’’ he told reporters in Maiduguri.

    He called for the deployment of paramilitary personnel to secure the borders ”so that whoever wants to come in will be screened.”

    He added: “Our people are ready to support the security agencies. In fact the military men on ground are doing a good job there.

    “We have more 7000 people that have returned as at last Thursday and more people are still coming. In fact they are eager to come back to come.”

    Boko Haram insurgents invaded the border town in August 2014 killing hundreds of the residents.

    Over 50,000 residents were forced to flee to Cameroon, Maiduguri and Adamawa states.

    Nigerian troops reclaimed Gomboru Ngala five months ago from the militants after the Chief of Army Staff Lt Gen Buratai led top generals and security outfit to raise the Nigerian flag in the town.

    The returnees crossed the 300-metre   river bridge that forms the border with Cameroon, following calls by military and local leadersý for residents to return.

    “We found a looted and burnt out town which is a shadow of its former self,” said Abacha Mari, one of those who returned to Gamboru last Wednesday.

    “More than nine-tenths of the buildings in the town have been damaged by fire while ýthe rest has been washed away by the rains,” he added.

    “Everything was looted and the streets are barely recognisable.”

    Gamboru has been repeatedly targeted in the Boko Haram insurrection, which has cost the lives of 17,000 people in Nigeria and made over 2.5 million homeless since 2009.

    Although Boko Haram were forced out of Gamboru 11 months ago, the refugees say they are only beginning to feel confident enough to return because the Nigerian army has sent a large contingent to the town.

    The return of the refugees is being coordinated by Cameroonian soldiersý and local officials in Gamboru, the returning residents said.

    The Nigerian refugees and their belongings werýe screened at the Cameroonian side of the bridge by soldiers using sniffer dogs to detect explosives before they were allowed to cross back into Nigeria.

    Nigerian officials were on hands to welcome them and provided them with the necessary papers for their return.

    Returning residents scoured their empty homes in the vain hope of finding any personal ýeffects neglected by Boko Haram.

    “Nobody found anything in their homes which have been looted and burnt,” said ýreturnee Ibrahim Wanzan.

    The destruction that they found came as no surprise. Some of the refugees had already visited Gamboru under the protection of Chadian soldiers in February 2015 and described it then as a “ghost town”.

    A key source of the locals’ livelihood, the market, has also been destroyed.

    It formerly attracted traders from neighbouring Chad and Cameroon.

    “Our main problem is food and how to rebuild our homes,” Wanzan said.

    The returned residents have been living on the food they brought from Fotokol and desperately hope to receive aid from the Nigerian government before supplies run out, Mari said.

    The National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA)  plans to send aid to Gamboru in coming days.

    “We are aware of the return of thousands of Gamboru residents from Cameroon and we are ýworking to send relief items to them in the next few days,” a NEMA official told AFP.

  • Military kills 90 insurgents in Borno

    Military kills 90 insurgents in Borno

    The troops of the Operation Lafiaya Dole said they  intercepted three suspected suicide bombers attempting to enter Maiduguri the Borno state capital Friday along Maiduguri/Mafa checkpoint.

    The  Deputy Theatre commander of Operation Lafiya Dole Major General Lucky Irabor  told newsmen at the operation media centre in Maiduguri the troops at the checkpoint sight two female suicide bombers and a male suicide bomber trying to infiltrate Maiduguri along Maiduguri-Mafa road, where one of the female suicide bomber detonated her own killing herself and one other female bomber, while the male suicide bomber was gunned down by the troops of the Nigerian Army while trying to run into their midst.

    He also informed that  63 Boko Haram terrorists  were killed from Monday 18th January 2016 to  Friday 22nd 2016 at  various places within the theater of operation, adding that many AK47 riffles, ammunition, Anti Aircraft Gun, RPG, GMPG, explosives, vehicles, motorcycles among others were recovered from the operations.

    “Our troops conducted a fighting patrol at Afe, Kudiye, Souma, Dikwa Mijigeta, Mida villages of Borno state. During the operation our troops come in contact with Boko Haram terrorist at  Kudiye and Mijigete where 370 hostages were rescued and brought to IDP camp in Dikwa and 3 rifles and 41 motorcycles were destroyed,” he said.

    Maj. Gen. Irabor also stated that troops have cleared some Boko Haram hideouts in Wala, Tirkopytir and Durubajuwe in Gwoza local government area, where they recovered GMPG, locally made Dane gun and a grinding machine were recovered.

    He maintained that troops also came in contact with Boko Haram terrorist in Huyum in Askira/uba local government area, adding that  “the terrorists sighting troops abandoned their families behind which including  five women and 12 children and are currently undergoing interrogation.

    According to him, the Nigerian Air force provides closed air support and surveillance to the ground troops in all the encounters with the terrorists.

    He commended the efforts of the troops and renewed call for the troops and the public to be more vigilant and security conscious at all times, especially at checkpoints, worship centre, markets, motor parks and schools.

    He also called on the general public to continue to provide useful information to security agencies of any suspicious person within their environment so as to help ride the state and the region of all criminal elements.

  • Ex-lawmaker lauds police over arrest of Boko Haram suspect

    A former member of the Lagos State House of Assembly, from Oshodi-Isolo Constituency and who is also an indigene of Ondo State, Hon. Omowunmi Olatunji-Edet, has lauded the Nigerian Police for intercepting some suspected Boko Haram members in the state recently.

    In a telephone interview with our Correspondent, Hon. Olatunji-Edet said the development is a plus for the Nigerian police force because the action will help boost the security of the state. She said: “Our security agencies must be encouraged and supported to assist them in performing their duty optimally. People must be at alert at all times. They must also be ready to give genuine information to security agencies within their community in order to save lives and properties.“

    He enjoined the people of Ondo State not to panic and that they should cooperate with security personnel to assist them in doing their work.

    He assured that the Federal Government, led by President Muhammadu Buhari, will do everything possible to rid the country of the menace of terrorists.