Tag: boko haram

  • Air Force strikes Boko Haram camps in northern Borno

    The Nigerian Air Force said Saturday that it has conducted air strikes on Boko Haram terrorists Camp at Zanari in northern part of Borno State.

    Its spokesman, Air Commodore Ibikunle Daramola said in a statement that scores of insurgents were killed during the strikes.

    He added that the attacks on the terrorists were carried out after intelligence reports have indicated their presence in the area.

    Air Commodore Daramola said: “The Air Task Force (ATF) of Operation LAFIYA DOLE has destroyed an Islamic State of West Africa Province (ISWAP) terrorists’ camp at Zanari in the northern part of Borno State.

    “This was achieved on 20 February 2019 in air strikes conducted sequel to intelligence reports indicating that the terrorists were using the settlement as a staging area from where they launch attacks against own ground troops’ locations.

    Read also: Etiebet decries violence at Oruk Anam

    “A Nigerian Air Force (NAF) Intelligence Surveillance and Reconnaissance (ISR) platform, which was subsequently detailed for confirmatory surveillance over the area, observed considerable terrorist activities in the settlement and therefore called for the scrambling of 2 Alpha Jet aircraft to attack the camp in successive strikes resulting in the destruction of several structures as well as the neutralization of their ISWAP occupants.

    ” The NAF, operating in concert with surface forces, will sustain its efforts to completely destroy all remnants of the terrorists in the Northeast. “

  • Explosion: We fired to scare Boko Haram – Army

    The Army explained that the multiple sound of controlled-gun fire on Saturday morning heard in the outskirts of Maiduguri, was for “security calculations”.

    The Acting Director of Army Public Relations, Col. Sagir Musa said in a statement that the gun fire was not targeted at the public.

    Musa denied reports  that Boko Haram attacked Maiduguri or neighbouring  communities.

    “As of now Borno, especially Maiduguri township is calm and peaceful. People have already started voting in many locations across the state,” he said.

    He urged the people to turn out en mass to vote for the candidates of their choice.

    Musa also said there was a futile attack on a security outpost in Geidam general area in Yobe.

    He said that no casualty was recorded.

    The situation is calm and peaceful. People have largely turned out to cast their vote without any hindrance.”

    NAN

  • Breaking: Boko Haram launches attack in Yobe State

    Boko Haram has just launched an offensive attack on Geidam town, Yobe State

    Residents are currently running away from the village, to nearby communities

     

    Details Later

  • Breaking: Multiple explosions rock Maiduguri

    Multiple explosions on Saturday morning rocked Maiduguri, the capital of Borno state.

    Details shortly…

  • Air Force kills scores of Boko Haram fighters in Borno

    The Nigerian Air Force (NAF) has said it destroyed Boko Haram terrorists’ camp and neutralised some of its fighters at Arboko village in Borno State.

    In a statement yesterday in Abuja, the nation’s capital, the NAF Director of Public Relations and Information, Air Commodore Ibikunle Daramola said the air strikes were launched after an intelligence platform established the presence of the terrorists in the area.

    He said: “The Air Task Force (ATF) of Operation Lafiya Dole has decimated a Boko Haram Terrorists (BHTs) camp and neutralised some of their fighters at a settlement called Arboko in Borno State.

    Read also: I’ll drive to campaign without bulletproof, Shettima dares Boko Haram

    “The operation was conducted on February 18 while a NAF Alpha jet and an Intelligence Surveillance and Reconnaissance (ISR) platform were providing close air support to troops of 82 Brigade, Nigerian Army.

    “In the course of the operation, the ISR aircraft spotted a group of BHT fighters within Arboko village and vectored the Alpha jet to engage their camp with rocket fire, thereby degrading the terrorists’ structures and neutralising some of their fighters.

    “The NAF, operating in concert with surface forces, will sustain its efforts to completely destroy all remnants of the terrorists in the Northeast.”

  • Re: “On the ‘lie-gend of Buratai:” when reason deserts a critic

    I least knew the concept of the book “ The Legend of Buratai,” authored   Dr. Abubakar Mohammed Sani  would elicit  excitingly   robust  attention. It is a fictional narrative of the daring escapades of Nigerian soldiers led by the irrepressible and craggy soldier, the incumbent Chief of Army Staff (COAS) Lt. Gen. Tukur Yusufu Buratai against the Islamic extremist sect, Boko Haram insurgents in Nigeria.
    To assert that the book is a fine fictional rendition of these military adventures is stating the obvious. It belongs to the category of children’s literature and slated for public presentation on May 17, 2019 to an audience of school children in Abuja.  But some public commentators are having sleepless nights over a matter which has no correlation with their clearly poisoned minds.  I am excited for one reason; in academics criticisms are an implicit expression of the strength of a piece of art work.
    The article by one Abimbola Adelakun captioned, “the lie-gend of Buratai,” is one criticism which has compelled my deeper appreciation of the “The Legend of Buratai.”  It fruitlessly attempted to parody the concept of the book and, Gen.  Buratai its main character.
    In this desperation, the critic blindfolds herself  and pours out barefaced umbrage on Gen. Buratai and members of the academia who are celebrating Buratai’s heroic deeds in droves. She questions the elevation of Gen. Buratai to the mythical status of a legend. I perceive critic Adelakun as a commentator on a vengeful mission in a world she is thoroughly disenchanted and disillusioned, but does not know where to direct her anger.
    In her state of mind, I saw a replica of what writer Jack Kerouac says; “If critics say your work stinks it’s because they want it to stink and they can make it stink by scaring you into conformity with their comfortable little standards. Standards so low that they can no longer be considered “dangerous” but set in place in their compartmental understandings.”
    So, the determination to deconstruct a positive story, sees the critic twisting facts and even outrightly peddling lies  to make the imagined reasons for the  upbraid  appear convincing . But her twists and crafted lies have fascinated me more and (I believe others) to the contents of the book.
    It is not difficult to fetch the motive of the critic, as a hireling on a destructive voyage, who must demolish her target at all cost. This feeling assails with the opening paragraph. It says; “Since he became the Chief of Army Staff, a pattern of narcissism has followed the pronouncements and actions of Lieutenant General Tukur Yusuf Buratai. Even the military under him comes up with funny ideas such as setting up zoos and parks in barracks, establishing cattle ranches, and producing military vehicles.”
    What begs for understanding is why the critic feels the Army under Gen. Buratai should not be narcissistic. There is no sane reason for soldiers who are winning the war on Boko Haram to flaunt the egoistic aura about their exploits on the battlefront. We were in Nigeria when poorly armed soldiers flinched at the battlefield before insurgents.  But the narrative has changed in favour of Nigeria with the winning streaks.
    And to think that in the era of economic crunch, the Army should have no business with sourcing for other channels of revenue generation to enhance its incomes by frowning at why it dabbled into agricultural investments is absurd.  It is also ludicrous to berate Buratai’s tinkering with the idea of partnership with automobile companies in Nigeria to manufacture military vehicles under a government, which sermonizes the policy of self-dependence and local content in patronage of goods and services.
    Adelakun is wailing loudly about the obsession of the academic community with the Buratai phenomenon by authoring books about him or naming structures after him. But it goes to profess that truth cannot be repressed. And the intelligentsia have seen the glaring changes in Gen. Buratai’s leadership of the Army and the daring exploits of the troops he leads against terrorists these past three years.
    The critic’s innuendo that Buratai is influencing these memorable gestures is infantile reasoning, unprovable and far from the reality.  While people like her , perhaps, enviously holds back appreciation to the legacies of Gen. Buratai and the Nigerian soldiers, everyone must not toe her mindset.
    Therefore, critic Adelakun describes the thematic thrust  of the literary rendition of Gen. Buratai as a “monstrous lie,” because she knows it, but pained to recognize that the Army Chief has reclaimed  all the 17 LGAs or  captured territories in Nigeria. It was a herculean task with his two or three predecessors.
    Buratai has demystified Sambisa forest. And Nigerians know, it is not a “monstrous lie,” that insurgents’ operations have been confined to the obscure parts of Borno state and the Lake Chad Basin, stretching into the Niger and Chadian Republics.
    Nigerians know it is not deception that the capacity of insurgents to strike recklessly and freely, visiting horrendous atrocities on every part of Northern Nigeria, including Abuja has been severely weakened by the troops led by Gen. Buratai.  It is indubitable that over 17, 000 Nigerians, including Chibok and Dapchi school girls have regained their freedom from Boko Haram captivity and reunited with families under his leadership of the Army.
    Anyone is free to hate Buratai, but it cannot obviate these historical facts. Evidentially, poorly equipped troops cannot achieve such milestones in the combat against terrorists. The critic is free to guess the armoury strength of the Nigerian Army as poor. But what is certain is that the army cannot publicly disclose or display the sophistry of its arsenal to please critics as nicely bargained from time to time. Its not done anywhere and they can howl till the end of the world, but nothing would reverse this policy.
    But truth is powerful. It triumphs over falsehood and it influences the mind into subconscious ululations in acknowledgment.  And moved by this potent force, the critic who remonstratively doubted  the legend in Gen. Buratai, still  confessed  that  “Yes, indeed, the man has been at the helm of affairs in the fight against Boko Haram. While there has been some victory against Boko Haram (and part of it preceded Buratai in office anyway), the battle is far from over.”
     Even in  this natural flow of acknowledgement, the critic still incurably anguishes in conceding all the deserved accolades to Gen. Buratai and the Nigerian troops.  But it does not escape notice and no one is begging his appreciation.
    I find the critic’s allusion to Gen. Buratai   as a politician very revolting and uncharitable.  Buratai is not a politician by any nuance, but the critic adamantly  stated;  “ Ideally, the university is where the antics of a politician desperate to write himself into history as a legend should have met the stiffest resistance.”
     It all betrays the critic’s cloudiness in the ideas she has penciled down or expressed. How does Gen. Buratai qualify as a politician?  It is spurred by the feeling that the affection Buratai enjoys from the academic community across regions of Nigeria is sponsored. And of course,  it is true, only politicians have the financial muscle to embark or fund  such projects.  But Buratai is feted naturally.
    Adelakun should know there is nothing abnormal for soldiers to die in war. American troops battling terrorism in the Middle East are killed every day by terrorists, but the American government does not make funfare of their burials. But Gen. Buratai has always accorded a befitting burial to slain  gallant soldiers in the course of battling insurgency.
    And to blame Gen. Buratai for the bandits killings in some states or kidnappings is stretching the argument beyond tolerable limits. The critic should know, the first constitutional responsibility of the Army is not for internal security. They only intervene through the instrumentality of a Presidential Order and in all instances, they have performed impressively and deserve no such vilification.
    The critic revealed her mask identity when she  delved into the controversial attack on the convoy of the COAS in Zaria and his backing of the lawless  Iranian-sponsored members of  Shiites in Nigeria. Similarly, he expressed fondness for the aberrational   Nnamdi Kanu-led armed criminal gangs assembled under IPOB. No sane or patriotic citizen of a country backs enemies of the state to torment and terrorize the people.
    Only in Nigeria, one finds critics like Adelakun, devoting pen and time defending the foreign-backed agents of destabilization against their own country.  When such incensed sects mow down innocent people in unprovoked attacks, critics like Adelakun  do not raise a voice in condemnation or lament the violation of the human rights of the victims.  No one is cowed by such empty and patronizing criticisms.
    Gen. Buratai has done enough for his country, Nigeria and deserves every adoration. Those who have embarked on baseless criticisms of his stewardship are only blinded by an illogicality, propelled by selfishness, which bows to the detects of covert paymasters. But to the contrary, he is not denigrated by it.
    The Army Chiefs uncountable admirers will always console themselves with the wisdom of novelist   Kurt Vonnegut who says;  “As for literary criticism in general: I have long felt that any reviewer who expresses rage and loathing for a novel or a play or a poem is preposterous. He or she is like a person who has put on full armor and attacked a hot fudge sundae or a banana split.”
    Okanga writes from Agila, Benue State.

     

  • Air Force destroys Boko Haram Camp in Borno

    The Nigerian Air Force said on Wednesday that it has destroyed Boko Haram terrorists’ camp and neutralized some of its fighters in a village called Arboko in Borno State.

    The NAF Director of Public Relations and Information, Air Commodore Ibikunle Daramola said in a statement that the strikes were launched after an intelligence platform had established the presence of the terrorists in the area.

    Air Commodore Daramola said: “The Air Task Force (ATF) of Operation LAFIYA DOLE has decimated a Boko Haram Terrorist (BHT) camp and neutralized some of their fighters at a settlement called Arboko in Borno State.

    Read Also: Air Force strikes insurgents in Northern Borno

    “The operation was conducted on 18 February 19 while a Nigerian Air Force (NAF) Alpha Jet and an Intelligence Surveillance and Reconnaissance (ISR) platform were providing close air support to troops of 82 Brigade Nigerian Army.

    “In the course of the operation, the ISR aircraft spotted a group of BHT fighters within Arboko village and vectored the Alpha Jet to engage their camp with rocket fire, thereby degrading the terrorists’ structures and neutralizing some of their fighters.

    “The NAF, operating in concert with surface forces, will sustain its efforts to completely destroy all remnants of the terrorists in the Northeast.”

  • NAF jet destroys insurgents’ camp in Borno

    The Nigerian Air Force ( NAF ) says its Operation LAFIYA DOLE has decimated a Boko Haram Terrorist (BHT) camp and neutralised some of their fighters at a settlement called Arboko in Borno.

    Air Commodore Ibikunle Daramola, NAF Director of Public Relations and Information, disclosed this in a statement on Wednesday in Abuja.

    The NAF spokesperson said the operation of the Air Task Force (ATF) was carried out on Monday.

    Daramola explained that the Alpha jet destroyed the insurgent’s camp while providing close air support to troops of 82 Brigade, Nigerian Army.

    Read Also: NAF nabs 10 suspected bandits with weapons in Kaduna

    “The operation was conducted on Feb.18, while a Nigerian Air Force (NAF) Alpha Jet and an Intelligence Surveillance and Reconnaissance (ISR) platform were providing close air support to troops of 82 Brigade, Nigerian Army.

    “In the course of the operation, the ISR aircraft spotted a group of BHT fighters within Arboko village and vectored the Alpha Jet to engage their camp with rocket fire, thereby degrading the terrorists’ structures and neutralising some of their fighters,” he said.

    The spokesman said that NAF, operating in concert with surface forces, would sustain its efforts to completely destroy all remnants of the terrorists in the North East.

  • Leah’s father pleads with govt to rescue daughter

    Nathan Sharibu, father of Leah, has expressed displeasure that the Federal Government has abandoned him and the rescue of his daughter from Boko Haram’s captivity.

    The Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), while reacting to Leah’s continue incarceration, called on government, security agencies to ensure that she is rescued back home to her parents in peace.

    Speaking yesterday on TVC early morning news programme through a telephone conversation monitored by The Nation, Nathan pleaded with government to do everything possible to rescue Leah, adding that the situation was weighing him down.

    On the night of February 19, 2018, 14-year-old Leah was kidnapped by Boko Haram terrorists from her school, the Government Girls Science and Technical Secondary School in Dapchi, Yobe State, along with 110 other girls and a schoolboy under a questionable circumstance.

    One year now, Leah is still in captivity despite several protests and efforts by government and stakeholders in the education sector.

    Her father said: “The Federal Government assured me that this administration would do its best to rescue my daughter. Besides that, President Muhammadu Buhari sent two ministers to my house in Dapchi, Yobe State to assure us that all that she would return home safely.

    “Since then, I have not heard anything from the Federal Government again. The other bodies that have been deeply concerned about the development are only the churches and Muslims that are trying their possible best. The government has been silent on this issue. I am only pleading with government as I always do that they should do their possible best to see that my daughter returns safely.

    “She is still a young girl and all of us have children in our homes. You can imagine my situation since then. Government supposed to do something urgently. Today is one year that she has been in captive.”

    CAN President Rev. Samson Ayokunle called on Nigerians to pray for her safety while in the Boko Haram’s captivity.

    Ayokunle said CAN has met with President Muhammadu Buhari to intervene on how Leah can be rescued.

    The CAN boss, who spoke with The Nation through his Special Assistant (Media & Communications), Pastor Adebayo Oladeji, said: “We also recalled that the Federal Government later began a negotiation with the abductors for the return of the victims. And one month later, that decision yielded results as the terrorist group drove the abducted students back into the heart of Dapchi on March 21, 2018, as agreed with the Federal Government.

    Read also: Edo schools resume today

    “The sight was unbelievable as terrorists entered the town in triumph and had the temerity to even harass their parents for sending their children and wards to school against their teachings. No single security operative was in sight to call them to order.

    “To worsen the situation, it was not all the 111 abducted girls that were returned. We later learnt that five of them had died while the only Christian girl among them, Leah Sharibu, was denied freedom because of her faith!”

    The statement added: “It is reprehensible, wicked, ungodly and condemnable that this innocent girl is being persecuted because of her faith. Every opportunity CAN leadership has to meet with President Muhammadu Buhari is being used to prevail on his government to get her released. There was even two occasions when the terrorists reportedly signalled their readiness to release Leah, if the government is ready to pay her ransom, but there was nothing being done in this regard.

    “All that were returned were said to be set free on the payment of the ransom though this was denied, but nobody buys the denial. And even  if no kobo was paid and now the terrorists are willing to negotiate, what sacrifice is too much to get her free?

    “We once again call on the government and all security agencies to wake up from their slumber. A government that cannot protect the citizens is a failed government.”

  • I’ll drive to campaign without bulletproof, Shettima dares Boko Haram

    Borno State Governor, Kashim Shettima on Tuesday vowed to return to Gambaru Ngala in a non-bulletproof vehicle to campaign for his senatorial bid and re-election of President Muhammadu Buhari.

    The Boko Haram insurgents had last week carried out attacks on his convoy at Maiduguri-Gamboru road while travelling for campaigns for his senatorial bid on the platform of the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    The Islamic State, ISIS, which appears to be working in collaboration with the Boko Haram, claimed responsibility for the attack on the convoy.

    ISIS, in a statement, claimed that 42 people were killed in the attack on the Governor’s motorcade.

    The attack was confirmed by the Special Adviser to the Governor on Communications and Strategy, Malam Isa Gusau, in a statement, claiming only three persons were killed.

    But speaking to State House correspondents after a security meeting presided by President Muhammadu Buhari and attended by heads of security agencies at the Presidential Villa, Abuja, Shettima said the attacks will not deter him from meeting with the people even if it would cost his life.

    He said: “Leadership requires courage. I will go back to Gamboru Ngala next week and ready to pay the supreme price if need be and I will not be going in a bulletproof car.

    “I will go in a normal car like any other members of my convoy and expose myself to all the risk that they are bearing for me to be protected.

    “But believe me, no matter how long the night is, darkness must give away to the light of the dawn. No matter how stormy the weather may well be, it won’t rain forever.

    “This madness will come to an end because it is a fight between light and darkness. It is a fight between cause and justice.”

    He added: “Be that as it may, uneasy lies the head that wears the crown. I am the chief security officer of the state, I should have the courage and believe me not that I am not petrified, no!

    “As the chief security officer of the state, the day I say I cannot go to a certain part of the state because of the insecurity, then what sort of confidence are you inspiring on the common man?

    “The Boko Haram basks in the oxygen of publicity, by attacking my convoy, by targeting my person.

    “They have gotten the much-needed boost. But then as they say if you cannot withstand the heat, get out of the kitchen.”