Tag: boko haram

  • Hollande ready to hold new summit on Boko Haram

    Hollande ready to hold new summit on Boko Haram

    French President Francois Hollande said on Friday he is ready to organise a new summit of nations fighting Boko Haram, a militant group that has suffered defeats in recent months in its campaign to forge an Islamist state in northeastern Nigeria.

    Hollande spoke after talks in the capital of Cameroon with President Paul Biya.

    Cameroon is part of a regional group of nations including Nigeria, Niger and Chad that began a campaign against Boko Haram this year, Reuters says.

    “Nigeria and Cameroon need to have the best relations, to work together. This corresponds well with the spirit we had at our last summit in Paris to take important decisions about Boko Haram, whose threat is getting stronger,” Reuters quoted Hollande as saying on the matter.

    “I am ready to gather anew, as soon as the presidents give me a date, this conference so that we can better act together.” The Paris summit took place in May 2014.

    Earlier this year, Boko Haram occupied large parts of northeastern Nigeria and was increasingly mounting attacks on neighbouring states, prompting the regional leaders into action to reverse gains made by the six-year insurgency.

    Operations carried out by regional forces have pushed the militants from most of their positions and Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari has vowed to crush what remains of the group.

  • Military, civilians repel Boko Haram’s attack in Maiduguri

    Military, civilians repel Boko Haram’s attack in Maiduguri

    It was another  horrible  night for residents of Maiduguri, Bornu State, Friday, as suspected Boko Haram insurgents launched another attack on the city.

    Reports said it took the resistance of the military  and youth vigilante group (Civilian JTF) before the advancing attackers were repelled.

    Eyewitnesses and security sources said the insurgents were advancing from Koshebe village in Mafa town,located about seven kilometres towards Zabarmari in Jere local government area with superior fire-power before the military kept them at bay.

    Details of casualty figure were still sketchy at the time of filling this report.

    An eyewitness, Maimala Shehu, said he saw youth vigilantes members carrying dead  and injured victims  to hospital.

    Unconfirmed reports said several people have been killed  and many others injured in two separate attacks on Friday evening in Bama town and Koshebe village of Mafa local government area of Borno State.

    This latest attacks came just 24 hours after similar incidents in Kukawa, Monguno, Malari in Konduga and Miringa town of Biu local government area claimed over 200 lives.

    Attempts by our Correspondent to get the military’s reaction on  the incidents failed due to poor telecommunications service in the state.

    The Nation gathered that Governor Kashim Shettima will visit one of the affected areas on Saturday morning.

  • We’re winning against Boko Haram, says Buhari

    We’re winning against Boko Haram, says Buhari

    Despite the Tuesday and Wednesday attacks that claimed 148 lives in Borno villages, President Muhammadu Buhari on Friday, said Nigeria is progressively winning the war against Boko Haram under the auspices of multinational force involving neighbouring countries.

    The President said the multinational force is progressively winning the fight against Boko Haram.

    President Buhari, who stated this in his address as the Special Guest of Honour at the graduation of 174 military officers of Senior Course 37 of the Armed Forces Command and Staff College (AFCSC), Jaji, Nigeria, pointed out the importance of harnessing the strengths of multiple security actors as demonstrated in the fight against terrorism.

    Represented by the Vice President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, Buhari expressed confidence in the quality of training received by officers in the institution which, according to him, has adequately prepared the military to confront current threats to national and global security.

    He however, cautioned the officers to be mindful of the “distracting and diversionary” nature of today’s highly sensitive media environment.

    “Some of you will be deployed in crisis-prone areas for either internal security or peace support operations outside your country. Given that we live in a common global environment, you must be conscious of your actions,” he warned the graduates.

    On the global scene, Buhari said Nigeria remains firmly committed to the maintenance of international peace and security, adding that the country will continue to collaborate with other governments to promote peace, stability and development on the African continent and around the world.

    He therefore charged the military to live up to expectations at all times and to uphold the nation’s enduring legacy in global peacekeeping operations.

    “As members of the armed forces, you have a principal role to play in protecting the lives and property of our citizens.

    “While maintaining internal peace and security remains primarily the responsibility of the civil police, the scale of the current security challenges facing our nation requires the military to play a more decisive role in support of civil power.

    “Always remember that ethnicity and religious intolerance are the greatest threats to our collective security as a people and as a nation. I urge you all to guard against these negative sentiments in the discharge of your noble duties,” he said.

    Earlier in his welcome address, Commandant of the College, AVM John Chris Ifemeje, said the course assembled on 30th June, 2014 and is made up of 174 students comprising 70 Nigerian Army officers, 43 Nigerian Navy officers, 31 Nigerian Air Force officers and 9 civilians from the Defence Intelligence Agency, DSS, Ministry of Defence, Nigerian Prison Service, Nigerian Immigration Service, NYSC and FRSC.

    He noted that among the graduating students were also 21 international military officers comprising five from Mali, four from Ghana, and two each from Benin Republic, Burkina Faýso, Sierra Leone and Togo, and one each from Cameroun, Chad, the Gambia and Senegal.

    “It has been 49 weeks of intense operational military training and academic activities and the course is designed to equip the officers with the appropriate skills to function as middle level commanders and Grade 1 Staff Officers,” he said.

    He advised the graduating students ýto strive to improve themselves and always keep abreast developments, not only in their immediate environment but also in the ever dynamic global environment.

  • We are winning war against Boko Haram‎ – Buhari

    We are winning war against Boko Haram‎ – Buhari

    Despite recent attacks by the Boko Haram sect, President Muhammadu Buhari on Friday said Nigeria is progressively winning the war against insurgents.

    He said this in his address as the Special Guest of Honor at the graduation of 174 military officers of senior course 37 of the Armed Forces Command and Staff College (AFCSC), Jaji.

    The President pointed out the importance of harnessing the strengths of multiple security actors as demonstrated in the fight against terrorism.

    Represented by Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, Buhari expressed confidence in the quality of training received by officers in the institution, which according to him has adequately prepared the military to confront current threats to national and global security.

    He, however, cautioned the officers to be mindful of the “distracting and diversionary” nature of today’s highly sensitive media environment.

    “Some of you will be deployed in crisis-prone areas, for either internal security or peace support operations outside your country, giving that we live in a common global environment, you must be conscious of your actions,” he warned the graduands.

    On the global scene, Buhari said Nigeria remains firmly committed to the maintenance of international peace and security, adding that the country will continue to collaborate with other governments to promote peace, stability and development on the African continent and around the world.

    He therefore charged the military to leave up to expectations at all time and to uphold the nation’s enduring legacy in global peacekeeping operations.

    “As members of the armed forces, you have a principal role to play in protecting the lives and property of our citizens.

    “While maintaining internal peace and security remains primarily the responsibility of the civil police, the scale of the current security challenges facing our nation requires the military to play a more decisive role in support of civil power.

    “Always remember that ethnicity and religious intolerance are the greatest threats to our collective security as people and as a nation. I urge you all to guard against these negative sentiments in the discharge of your noble duties,” the President counseled.

  • Chad seizes suspected Boko Haram weapons cache

    Chad seizes suspected Boko Haram weapons cache

    Chadian security forces, announced that they have seized a large weapons cache including guns, rockets and ammunition in a house in N’Djamena occupied by suspected members of the Boko Haram.

    The officials said the weapons, buried under the courtyard of the house in the eastern neighbourhood of Guinebor, were destined for northern Nigeria.

    One of the investigators said on condition of anonymity, that they were part of the weapons that Baana Fanaye, Boko Haram’s logistics chief for northern Cameroon and Chad, was preparing to send to Nigeria.

    He said the revelation came during an investigation after Fanaye was arrested in a raid by Chadian police in June.

    State prosecutor Alghassim Khamis said the latest arms cache, discovered on Thursday, was found hidden in one of the houses raided on June 27.

    He said Chadian authorities arrested 60 suspected militants on June 27 and dismantled their suicide attacks cells.

    Khamis said two days later, five officers and six militants were killed during a raid on an arms cache.

  • Boko Haram kills 11 defecting members in Borno

    The Boko Haram sect on Friday killed 11 of its members for attempting to defect.

    The former rebels had allegedly fled from a Boko Haram camp near Miringa village in Biu Local Governmet area of Borno State.

    A 20-man killer team was hurriedly raised by the sect and dispatched to go after the rebels.

    They were rounded up in the village and put on trial.

    The sect’s emergency court found them guilty of desertion.

    Within minutes the killer team slit the throats of the deserters in the presence of the villagers to discourage further defections, according to an agency report.

  • Buhari condemns latest Boko Haram killings

    Buhari condemns latest Boko Haram killings

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Friday condemned the latest killings by Boko Haram in Borno State.

    In a statement issued by his Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Garba Shehu, the President described them as most inhuman and barbaric.

    President Buhari said the murder of up to 150 innocent men, women and children in Kukawa is a very heinous atrocity which must be unreservedly condemned by all people of conscience.

    He believed that these last desperate acts by fleeing agents of terrorism underscore the urgent need to bring to early fruition efforts of his government to form a more effective international coalition against insurgency and terrorism in Nigeria and neighbouring countries.

    Buhari also urged Muslims in Nigeria and across the world to reject with one voice the attackers’ claim of acting in the name of Islam, and tell the terrorists to stop the abasement of their religion.

    The President conveyed his condolences to families of victims of Boko Haram’s dreadful killings in Kukawa.

     

     

  • Twin blasts kill 10 in Borno

    Two suicide explosions along a highway in Borno State killed at least 10 people on Thursday afternoon, state police said, the latest in a string of almost daily attacks by suspected insurgents.

    A female suicide bomber killed seven and injured 13 at a village called Malari on the main road from Bama to Konduga while a second suicide bomber killed three in blast along the same road, the state police chief, Aderemi Opadokun, said.

    A military source told Reuters that in both cases the suicide bombers targeted crowded areas where locals sell fruit along the highway, which runs southeast of the state capital Maiduguri.

    Thousands of people have been killed and about 1.5 million displaced during Boko Haram’s six-year fight to create an Islamic caliphate in the northeast Nigeria.

  • Boko Haram kills 148 in Borno attacks

    Boko Haram kills 148 in Borno attacks

    BOKO Haram Insurgents  on Wednesday invaded Kukawa town in Kukawa Local Government and Monguno town in Monguno Council of Borno State, killing 148 people.

       Over 68 persons were injured.

    Kukawa is a farming and herding community, located about 179 kilometres north of Maiduguri, the state capital.

    A survivor, Aji Bukar, who escaped to Maiduguri, gave a horrific account of how the terrorists surrounded Kukawa and started shooting indiscriminately at the time Muslims were about to break their fast.

    He said: “We started hearing gunshots all over the town. The terrorists surrounded the town, shooting. Confusion and panic took over the town as people ran helter-skelter. They were confused.”

    According to him, the insurgents had a field day, leaving the streets littered with bodies.

    Residents, Bukar said, were yesterday still afraid to come out to bury the dead.

    “ The village is deserted. Elders are afraid the attackers may return, which has delayed the burial of the victims,” he said.

    A member of the Civilian Joint Task Force (CJTF) told our correspondent on the phone that the militias  caught many residents and shot them in two mosques.

    He said: “People were just preparing to break their Ramadan fast and had gathered in nearby mosques when the Boko Haram insurgents came in a convoy of Toyota Hilux vehicles and motorcycles painted in ash colour. They rounded up people and shot them.

    “They torched several houses. One of our colleagues, who escaped the attack, said they have recovered 97 bodies, some of them burnt beyond recognition, before burying them this afternoon (yesterday).”

    Forty-eight people were reportedly killed at Monguno in Monguno Local Government Area of Borno State on Tuesday night, which is located about 145 kilometres from Maiduguri and 25 kilometres from Kukawa town.

    About 23 people were said to have sustained injuries. Houses and shops were burnt down by the gunmen suspected to be Boko Haram terrorists.

    Narrating the Monguno attack, an escapee said the insurgents fled from the Sambisa Forest and regrouped on the shores of Lake Chad to attack unprotected villages near Monguno town.

    He said: “The attackers, armed with rifles and explosives, burst into our villages and summoned men to gather for a special message from the Boko Haram leader. Three minutes after, one of the gunmen ordered them to lie down and all of them were shot dead at close range.”

    The man said they launched another attack on a nearby village, eight kilometres from Monguno, adding:  “The number of casualties, including the injured ones, is 23. Twenty-five farmers and herdsmen were killed in the other village.  No woman or child was killed.”

    The House of Representatives member representing Monguno, Nganzai and Marte Federal Constituency, Mohammed Tahir Monguno, confirmed the attack yesterday. He described it as deadly.

    A military source said:  “Many people were killed. I don’t think our men were there at the time of the attack. The casualty figure may be much high.”

    A former official of Kukawa Local Government, Alhaji Habib Kakero, wrote on his facebook: “Our town Kukawa has been attacked by Boko Haram. They killed many of our people. May  their souls rest in peace.”

    Mohammed Kukawa, who hails from Kukawa but lives in Maiduguri said he lost three of his family members in the attack.

    “A family member, who escaped to a nearby village in Niger Republic, called to tell me that my elder brother, who is a farmer, an uncle and other relations were among those killed yesterday,” he said.

    A medical personal of the Accident and Emergency Unit (E&AU) of the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital (UMTH) said 25 injured persons were brought in along with many bodies from Monguno and deposited at the morgue.

    “We received 25 victims of Boko Haram attacks in Monguno village today (Thursday). I was at the hospital when the victims were brought in by some security operatives with over a dozen members of Civilian Joint Task Force (CJTF),” he said.

  • Boko Haram kills 148 in Borno attacks

    Boko Haram kills 148 in Borno attacks

    68 others wounded

    It was yet another reign of terror as gunmen suspected to be members of the Boko Haram sect evaded Kukawa town of Kukawa Local Government area of Borno state killing at least 148 people and leaving about 68 wounded on Wednesday night.

    Kukawa is a farming and herding community, located about 179 kilometres north of Maiduguri, the state capital.

    One of the survivor who escaped to Maiduguri gave a horrific account of how the terrorist surrounded the entire village and started shooting sporadically at the time the Muslims fateful were about to break their fast for the day.

    We started hearing gunshots from nowhere all over the town. The terrorists surrounded the town shooting sporadically on the residents. Confusion and panic took over the town as people began to run for their lives to unknown destination confused,” Aji Bukar narrated.

    He disclosed that the insurgents hard a field day with their weapons shooting at sight any human object on their way as people ran to the bushes or their houses and lock themselves up for safety.

    He added that many of the dead bodies are still littered on the streets as the residents are afraid to come out to bury the dead as the time he had escaped.

    “As I speak to you, some of the corpses were still not buried. People are afraid to come out. The entire village is deserted. Elders in town were afraid the attackers may return which is delaying the burial of the dead bodies scattered over the tow,” he said.

    A member of the Civilian Joint Task Force (CJTF), also told our correspondent on phone that the insurgents caught up many residents and shot them in two separate mosques with the injuring of several others.

    “People were just preparing to break their Ramadan fast and already gathered in nearby mosques when Boko Haram people came on in a convoy of Toyota Hilux vehicles and motorcycles painted in ash colour.

    “They rounded up people and opened fire on them. Boko Haram later set fire on several houses burning many people. One of our colleagues who escaped the attack said they recovered 97 dead bodies, some of them burnt beyond recognition before burying them this afternoon (Thursday),” he said.
    Similarly, about 48 people were on Tuesday night killed in Monguno town of Monguno local government area of Borno state.

    No fewer than 23 people were also reported to have sustained various injuries and some houses and shops were also touched by the gunmen suspected to be Boko Haram terrorists.

    Narrating on the Monguno attack, an escapee informed that the insurgents fled from the Sambisa Forests and regrouped on the shores of Lake Chad to attack unprotected villages near Monguno town.
    He said; “The attackers armed with rifles and explosives burst into our villages; and summoned all the male villagers here to congregate for a special message from Boko Haram leader. Three minutes after, one of the gunmen ordered us to lie down with face on ground; and all of them
    were shot dead at close range.”

    He said they launched another attack on a nearby village, eight kilometers from Monguno, adding that; “the total casualties, including the injured ones have reached 23, while the one in the other village caused the death of 25 farmers and herdsmen. No woman or child was
    killed in the twin village attacks here in Monguno areas.”

    The House of Representatives member representing Monguno, Nganzai and Marte Federal Constituency at the National Assembly Barrister Mohammed Tahir Monguno confirmed the attack and described it as deadly.

    A military source disclosed that, “Many people were killed. I don’t think our men were there at the time of the attack,” the military source said, adding that “the casualty figure may be much high.”

    A former local official of Kukawa Local Government, Alhaji Habib Kakero wrote on his facebook that : “Our town Kukawa has been attacked by Boko Haram, they killed many of our people, and may Allah repose their souls in perfect peace.”

    Mohammed Kukawa who hails from Kukawa but resides in Maiduguri informed that  he lost three of his family members in the attack.

    “A family member who escaped to a nearby village in Niger Republic  has called to tell me my elder brother, who is a farmer, uncle and other relations were among those killed Wednesday,” he said.