Tag: boko haram

  • Boko Haram: 700 Gwoza refugees flee to Nasarawa

    Boko Haram: 700 Gwoza refugees flee to Nasarawa

    About 700 displaced persons from Gwoza, Chibok, Bama in Borno State  and its environs have fled to Kwubaru village, in Karu Local Government of Nasarawa State.

    The refugees who include men, women and children are divided into three different camps of Kwubaru, Angwar Jama’a and Takwa. They have been relocating to the village since March this year, in a bid to flee the troubled North-eastern part of the country.

    Since their arrival, the no government agency has acknowledged their presence or sent relive materials.  They have had to survive on contributions from well meaning Nigerians and hand me downs from their host community.

    The only recognition accorded to them by the government according to their leaders   was when they arrived and soldiers came in trucks and Hilux vans to harass them and arrest the Chief of Kwubaru for harbouring them.

    In the Kwubaru camp for example, women and children are the only ones that sleep in any one of the nine mud houses and they can be as many as 12 people or more in one room while the men sleep on sacks and mats outside even under the rain.

    Members of the #BringBackOurGirls (BBOG) advocacy visited the camp on a humanitarian visit to confirm the existence of internally displaced persons close to Abuja and donate  relieve materials which included foodstuffs, clothing, blankets and  mattresses

    Leader of the refugees and former Headmaster of Ghwaa primary school, Gwoza, Mallam Yohanna Wurawa explained that he  escaped Gwoza with his family after his house and school was burnt down to the refugee camp in Cameroon.

    Eventually, he said, his family and a few others were assisted by the Stephanus foundation to Kwabaru.

    Leader of the BBOG Hajia Saudatu Mahdi said that the group had visited the refugees  as part of their humanitarian effort and to establish the fact that there is truly Internally Displaced Persons (IDP) since the government denied knowledge of them.

    Saudatu promised that they group will write to National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) and the National Commission for Refugees, Migrants and Internally Displaced Persons  to notify them of the presence of the refugees  and the need to come to their assistance immediately.

     

  • Five Boko Haram insurgents surrender, says DHQ

    Five Boko Haram insurgents surrender, says DHQ

    The Defence Headquarters (DHQ) on Sunday  said five Boko Haram insurgents have surrendered after encounters in Konduga.
    The insurgents  were said to have pleaded for mercy after surrendering their weapons.
    The DHQ, which made the disclosure in a tweet on Sunday , said some captured insurgents were already giving useful information.
    The tweet said: “As the heat on terrorists continues, 5 terrorists yesterday surrendered with all their weapons to troops in Konduga pleading for mercy
    “Other captured terrorists have also been giving useful information on the subsequent plans of the group in an apparent offer to cooperate.”

  • Boko Haram kills four Camerounians in cross-border attack

    Boko Haram kills four Camerounians in cross-border attack

    Four civilians have been killed in northern Cameroun in a cross-border attack by Boko Haram terrorists, state radio said yesterday.

    Boko Haram struck in the early evening on Thursday in the village of Assighassia near the city of Mokolo. It is the latest of its   incursions into the hilly side of neighbouring Cameroun in recent months.

    Cameroun’s army responded, and two of the militants were killed and a Camerounian soldier injured, state-run Cameroun Radio Television reported late on Friday.

    “Two hours later, the terrorist group again attacked the village of Ganse, also close to Mokolo, and killed four civilians.”

    Officials in the defence ministry said yesterday they had been informed of the clashes and were seeking to confirm the details.

    More than 40,000 people have fled to Cameroun to escape Boko Haram attacks in northern Nigeria, according to the U.N. refugee agency UNHCR, leaving behind few but the elderly and the disabled in their villages across the border.

    But once over the border they are still not safe and UNHCR is seeking to transfer many of them to a refugee camp further from the frontier at Minawao.

    Foncha Ngeh, a businessman based in Cameroun’s northern hub of Maroua, said that hundreds of people were fleeing from isolated border villages in Cameroon.

  • Periscoping the ideal APC presidential candidate (1)

    Given the fact that corruption is our greatest problem in Nigeria, one that even pushed Boko Haram to what it has now become, Gen Buhari’s integrity should count positively for his candidacy.

    Justifying its tag as truly macabre, this past week showed, unambiguously, that PDP  will  stop at nothing to bring Nigeria down with it. Nigerians woke up  early in the week to read about the  PDP governorship aspirant in whose account  $50,000 was  allegedly found –how the godfathers must be missing Mr Ibori; soon after, it was  the turn of a Judge of the U.S Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, Justice Charles R. Norgle, to  cause  the eminent  PDP Southwest poster boy, Buruji Kashamu, the total indignity of having to waste money on a newspaper advert just to tell Nigerians that he will ‘fight till he gets justice’.  Judge Norgle had refused Kasamu’s motion to be acquitted in an earlier indictment of importing drugs to the U.S, but rather held that should Kasamu ever come to the U.S, voluntarily or not, he could be put on trial in the Federal District Court in Chicago.

    You would have thought that was enough for one week of what the APC has appropriately described as PDP’s  ‘series of global ridicule to which it has subjected Nigeria and her people’.

    Then popped up the mother of all ridicules, when a plane allegedly bought for evangelism was, instead, converted to laundering money , ferrying $9.3 million dollars to South Africa, accompanied by two  Nigerians and  an Israeli contractor. The money has since been ordered seized by the South African Assets Forfeiture Unit.

    All these are only a small fraction of PDP’s corruption ridden government and it is the more reason Corruption should be a key subject of APC’s campaign to tackle this government. Nigeria had never been this corrupt. It is for this reason I focus today on who the ideal APC Presidential candidate should be.  I hereby invite interested Nigerians to send me their views in not more than 800 words.

    Below are the views of  Abiodun Ayodele, a young Nigerian publisher, who has a good  grasp of  strategy.

    Under the title: APC AND THE 2015 PRESIDENCY, he wrote:

    “Can APC win the 2015 Presidential election?

    Yes. Can APC lose the 2015 Presidency, in spite of, having the potential to win it? Yes.

    The 2015 Presidency is in APC’s hands to win or lose, and  hardwork or lack of it, as well as  creativity or lack of it will determine which way.

    The APC national hierarchy as presently constituted  is in good hands with  the Chairman, Chief Oyegun and his Deputy, Chief Segun Oni being former state governors.  Lai Mohammed a lawyer with impressive thinking and writing ability is also there but  has the team demonstrated  the capacity to prosecute the 2015  elections to victory?

    So far, not convincingly.

    The  Chairman says  APC is  ‘maturely engaging President Jonathan but what does this mean or amount to with the President? Is it a compromised silence to hurt the interest of APC in 2015 or a lack  of  capacity to prosecute the 2015 presidential election  to  victory?

    Either way, it is unthinkable that APC, and the Nigerian people especially, would be  happy to allow President Jonathan  continue in office beyond 2015.  Why would a grossly incompetent leadership be allowed to continue to drag Nigeria further down in corruption, vision-lessness, poverty, and  the daily loss  of thousands of  innocent citizens in all manner of untamed conflicts?

    The Oyegun team’s ‘silence’ has given fillip to the PDP to monopolise the airwaves like a colossus. They now daily  insult the Nigerian people on television networks with their  huge lies of achieving so much in office!  The PDP now confidently deceives the people to believe that there is no person more capable than Jonathan for 2015 and, in truth, who will blame them for making these wild claims when the nearest opposition party seems to be taking a nap? (Apologies to Sabela Addide of The Punch newspaper)

    WHO SHOULD FLY THE APC FLAG?

    The simple answer to this poser is that evidences of previous electoral contests affirm that the most acceptable of APC’s likely candidates, and who can surely win, even massively, is General Muhammadu Buhari (rtd).

    Why General Muhammadu Buhari?

    The  truth is that here is an honest man who is also known for  honesty of purpose, and to date, no Nigerian has come up against him with any shred of a shady financial deal in all the positions of responsibility he has  held in the country. The APC hierarchy can do a simple arithmetic to confirm this assertion  or what did AC, and later  A C N candidates in the presidential elections of 2007, and 2011 score against him?

    General Muhammadu Buhari’s major electoral weakness has been his weak campaigns that were characterized by very  poor publicity of his personal qualities and his  unalloyed commitment to the public good, which he continues to demonstrate by drawing attention to how people in government have turned themselves to ‘authority stealing’. (apologies to late Fela Anikulapo-Kuti).

    Most Nigerian youth are not aware that General Muhammadu Buhari was once a Nigerian Head of State and that he neither stole public funds,  increased the price of petrol , nor allowed corruption to thrive in government, unlike what currently obtains in all the three tiers of government.

    General Buhari has the personal weakness of always keeping quiet over damaging allegations  against him, and, his campaign teams, over the years, have not been hard working. The campaign teams have, instead, always tended to conclude, naively, after losing an election that the general is probably not wanted by Nigerians and so would always be rigged out  by PDP. They say these things only to hide their  laziness and inability to put all material facts about General Buhari in the public domain to secure him the people’s vote. A Redeemed Church pastor friend that voted for General Buhari in the 2011 election told me he adjudged him the only candidate deserving of his vote at that election. I have also been privileged to listen to a top company executive after the 2011 poll complain of Nigerians’ folly in electing the current president. He said he voted General Buhari. These two people are Yoruba. Others I have met told me they voted General Buhari at

    the 2011 poll. No wonder he scored nearly 10% of Lagos votes in 2011 in spite of literally not campaigning here in the South. Any greater evidence of Buhari’s electoral acceptability? General Buhari can partner with persons like Professor Utomi, Governor Okorocha, Femi Falana (SAN), Prof. Akin Oyebode, or a notable Company Chief Executive or academician and the team would be more than convincing to win”.

    As my own little contribution, for now, let me add that I think the general’s campaigns had lacked adequate funding and his overall logistics suffered thereby; weaknesses which an APC  well-funded, issues-based campaign should effortlessly cure. For instance the CPC was primed to have won at least two or three additional  states in the governorship election in 2011 but for  lack of  funds and inadequate logistics.

    Given the fact that corruption is our greatest problem in Nigeria, one that even pushed Boko Haram to what it has now become, Gen Buhari’s integrity should count positively for his candidacy.

  • Borno’s economy under the yoke of Boko Haram

    A couple of years ago, Alhaji Mohammad Asheikh, 52,  used to be a major transporter in Gamboru, headquarters of Gamboru-Ngala Local Government Area (LGA) of Borno.

    His company — Gamboru Transport Company – then had about 15 trucks in its fleet.

    However, Asheikh is now a pauper living on charity, as his once-thriving business has collapsed; thanks to the Boko Haram insurgency.

    Recounting his ordeal, Asheikh said that his business nosedived after suspected Boko Haram insurgents launched several attacks on his vehicles on different routes.

    “I used to be a major transporter in Gamboru; I had about 15 vehicles, mostly trailers and articulated lorries.

    “Unfortunately, I lost everything within a very short time to Boko Haram attacks,’’ he said.

    Asheikh said: “It all started in November 2013 when I lost three trailers conveying goods from Kano to Maiduguri during an attack in Benishiekh, the headquarters of Kaga LGA.

    “The trailers were destroyed in an early morning attack by the insurgents, who also killed the drivers.’’

    He said that he lost another trailer in December 2013 in another attack within the same vicinity in Benisheikh.

    “When the November attacks occurred, we asked our drivers to hold on for a while but as soon as they started operation in December, one of my trailers was attacked again in Benisheikh,’’ he moaned.

    Asheikh said that he lost three other vehicles in a row in Mafa in January 2014.

    “In January this year, I lost three articulated vehicles conveying cement to the Republic of Cameroun during an attack in Mafa, headquarters of Mafa LGA.

    “I also suffered another huge loss in May when I lost three trailers at the Ngala park,’’ he said, adding: “The trailers were burnt while they were loading cows for transportation to the southern part of the country.

    “As it is now, I have lost everything but I thank God that I am still alive,’’ he added.

    Asheikh, who is currently taking refuge in a friend’s house in Maiduguri, said that he had been surviving on the goodwill of his friends and former associates.

    He, however, noted that a number of people similarly had a harrowing experience as a result of the insurgency.

    “So many people have lost their means of livelihood to the insurgency; we believe that the whole thing is a trial from God and it will end one day,’’ he said.

    Sharing similar sentiments, Alhaji Bello Maduganari, the Chairman of the Maiduguri chapter of the National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW), said that several members of the union suffered a similar fate.

    He specifically said that the Boko Haram violence had destroyed the livelihood of over 1, 000 members of the union in the last few years.

    “We lost over 50 members between January 2013 and August 2014, due to attacks on major roads by the insurgents.

    “Besides, more than 1,000 commercial vehicles were destroyed during the Boko Haram attacks,’’ he said, adding: “In Bama alone, over 200 commercial vehicles were destroyed.’’

    Maduganari, however, noted that the situation was not different in other places like Damboa, Konduga, Mafa, Dikwa and Marte, among others.

    “We have large number of members who are now unemployed, as their vehicles were destroyed in the attacks.

    “At present, most of them have nothing to do because they have lost their means of livelihood,’’ he added.

    The NURTW leader said that some of the union members had resorted to begging, all in a desperate need to eke out a living.

    “In all honesty, the situation is quite terrible but we thank the state government for providing occasional aid for our members, particularly during festivities.”

    • Inuwa is of the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN)

  • Boko Haram attacks Borno market, kills scores

    Boko Haram attacks Borno market, kills scores

    Mainok market, 56 kilometres from  Maiduguri, the Borno State capital came under Boko  Haram attack on Thursday, leaving  scores of buyers and sellers dead.

    The insurgents  robbed their victims of money and foodstuff, military sources said yesterday.

    Mainok is located  on  the Kano/Damaturu/Maiduguri highway.

    Witnesses said the terrorists struck at about 1.30pm when business was in full swing.

    A traveller, Hassan Maina who was on his way to Damaturu said he and his fellow travellers were almost  caught  in the  firing spree of  the insurgents.

    He said it was the heavy sounds of the gun shots that alerted them to the danger ahead .

    He said: “Hundreds of traders and residents fled the market in confusion, running to cross the highway to the other side while vehicles passing through the town were also making attempts to escape. It was such confusion.”

    “Many people may have been killed judging from the way the insurgents were shooting at the crowd. Vehicles were hitting one another and the Boko Haram kept shooting,” he added.

    Another source said  that the attackers first fired  a Rapid Propelled Grenade (RPG) into the   market before they started  shooting.

    “The death toll may be high because there were many people in the market,” the source said.

  • Boko Haram attacks Borno market, kills scores

    Boko Haram attacks Borno market, kills scores

    Mainok market, 56  kilometres from Maiduguri, the Borno State capital came under Boko  Haram attack on Thursday, leaving  scores of buyers and sellers dead.

    The insurgents  robbed their victims of money and foodstuff, military sources said yesterday.

    Mainok is located  on  the Kano/Damaturu/Maiduguri highway.

    Witnesses said the terrorists struck at about 1.30pm when business was in full swing.

    A traveller, Hassan Maina who was on his way to Damaturu said he and his fellow travellers were almost  caught  in the  firing spree of  the insurgents.

    He said it was the heavy sounds of the gun shots that alerted them to the danger ahead .

    He said: “Hundreds of traders and residents fled the market in confusion, running to cross the highway to the other side while vehicles passing through the town were also making attempts to escape. It was such confusion.”

    “Many people may have been killed judging from the way the insurgents were shooting at the crowd. Vehicles were hitting one another and the Boko Haram kept shooting,” he added.

    Another source said  that the attackers first fired  a Rapid Propelled Grenade (RPG) into the   market before they started  shooting.

    “The death toll may be high because there were many people in the market,” the source said.

  • Stop Boko Haram now, Catholic Bishops tell Fed Govt

    Stop Boko Haram now, Catholic Bishops tell Fed Govt

    CATHOLIC bishops in the country are asking the federal government to double its effort in the fight against terrorism in the country. The bishops say it is time to stop “these actual destroyers of Nigerians and Nigeria.”

    “Our government must do more than it is currently doing to safeguard our lives and defend our nation. It must do more than it is currently doing to fight off and disarm these actual destroyers of Nigerians and Nigeria. It must do more than it is currently doing to prevent segments of our nation from drifting, anarchy and mutual self-destruction and bring criminals to justice,” the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of Nigeria (CBCN) said as it rose from its Second Annual Plenary meeting in Warri,Delta State.

    Lamenting what they called the mass slaughter in Borno, Yobe, Adamawa, Taraba, Kano and Kaduna states and the burning and sacking of whole villages and churches and rectories by terrorists,the Catholic bishops said that “the situation right now, in the North East, Nigeria only confirms further killings, burnings and fleeing of defenceless Nigerians creating a heightened sense of unrest and siege for the whole nation.”

    They added: “As Nigeria tragically bleeds and burns, we Bishops are really alarmed at the scale of human, material destruction, and the disruption of village and community life with increased levels of hatred and potentials for more conflicts in the nation. While Muslims are sometimes targets of these destructive attacks, Christians Churches and non- Muslims in general are the principal targets for extermination, expropriation and expulsion by the Boko Haram insurgents, the perpetrators of all these destructions.

    “We believe that we still have governments- at Federal and State- levels whose primary duty it is to preserve and protect the life, of every Nigerian irrespective of tribe, religion, social class or tradition.” They warned all communities across the country to “be alert to the grave danger facing all of us and our nation from within and from without. “The issue is not about who becomes president or governor or senator after the 2015 General Elections.

    The issue is about the life and security of every one of us who loves his or her life and really cares about our living together in peace as noble Nigerians.” The CBCN mandated its CARITAS (charity/emergency) office to immediately provide funds and succour to victims of terrorism, and urged government to “reach out in charity and solidarity to rehabilitate and support our displaced brothers and sisters wherever they are and so sustain our God-given human dignity.” They resolved to organize a national all night prayer scheduled for 13 and 14 November, 2014 in Abuja.

  • 60 killed as troops capture Boko Haram leader in Konduga battle

    60 killed as troops capture Boko Haram leader in Konduga battle

    After another battle in Konduga on Wednesday night till the wee hours of yesterday, the Defence Headquarters (DHQ) has said troops captured a Boko Haram leader.

    It also confirmed that 60 insurgents were killed during encounters with troops.

    The said leader, whose name DHQ did not disclose, is injured. He is being treated at a military facility, which was suspected to be  in Borno State.

    There were indications last night that the captive might be flown out of Borno State “any moment from now” for what a source described as “enhanced treatment and interrogation”.

    The breakthrough by troops was disclosed by the DHQ in a tweet on the ongoing operations in Konduga, about 35 kilometres to Maiduguri, the Borno State capital.

    In the last one week, Boko Haram insurgents have attempted to seize Konduga thrice but they were repelled by troops.

    The insurgents’ plan is to use Konduga as a base to attack on Maiduguri.

    Earlier on Wednesday evening, the DHQ had admitted that the insurgents shelled Konduga, in desperate bid to take over the town.

    In the fresh battle, the DHQ said, troops engaged “another large number of heavily armed terrorists trying to enter the town”.

    The DHQ tweet said: “A seriously wounded high ranking terrorist leader is being treated in a military medical facility after he was captured in the operation.

    “He was among those captured yesterday. 60 of his fighters died during the series of attacks they launched to gain access to Konduga and environs.

    “Weapons captured include 24 rifles, five rocket propelled grenade tubes, two machine guns and one anti-aircraft, as well as a Ford Ranger vehicle. Another Ford Ranger vehicle was destroyed.

    “Also at Benishek where troops fought through an ambush yesterday, four motorcycles of the terrorists were captured.”

    Another military source said: “The supply of more sophisticated equipment and military hardwares to troops has buoyed their confidence. Troops do not only ambush the insurgents, they now confront them headlong.

    “Hours from Wednesday till early Thursday were particularly bad for Boko Haram terrorists operating in the Northeast as they lost scores of their members during repeated attempts to enter Konduga, about 70 kilometres to Maiduguri.

     “The terrorists’ leader whose name is still being kept a secret was captured after the second but fiercer battle waged by the insurgents to capture the town following their earlier routing by the military.”

    The Defence Headquarters last night said one soldier was killed and four others wounded in a separate encounter with Boko Haram insurgents in Benishek in Borno State.

    Benishek is a notorious operation axis of the dreaded sect, which has killed more than 100 people in the area.

    It was gathered that troops invaded Benishek to rout out the insurgents from the area.

    The DHQ, which gave an update on the operation, said: “One Soldier however died while four who were wounded are receiving treatment.

    Fifty seven  men and three officers of the Nigerian Armed Forces who were injured at the war front in the on-going military campaign against insurgents in the North-Eastern part of the country have again received succour as Defence and Police Officers Wives Association (DEPOWA) yesterday donated some items, including unspecified amount of money to them on their sick bed.

    The President of DEPOWA and wife of the Chief of Defence Staff, Mrs. Mary Badeh who led officials and members of association to the hospital donated hampers, containing beverages and  toiletries to the wounded soldiers to help alleviate their sufferings.

    The donation came barely a week after the 60 military men were decorated with medals of honour by the Minister of Defence, Gen. Muhammad Aliyu Gusau (rtd), at the 44 Nigerian Army Reference Hospital, Kaduna.

    The Medical Director, 44 Army Reference Hospital, Kaduna, Maj.Gen. Abimbola Amusu said the affected men and officers were responding to treatment and some of them will soon be discharged.

  • Troops repel Boko Haram in Konduga

    Troops repel Boko Haram in Konduga

    For the second time in a week, troops have repelled Boko Haram insurgents from Konduga, which is about 35 kilometres to Maiduguri.

    The insurgents were reportedly on a reprisal mission yesterday. They planned to launch a fresh campaign to use Konduga as a base to attack Maiduguri, the Borno State capital.

    But troops lying in wait for the insurgents resisted them in a 12-hour battle.

    More than 50 insurgents were said to have been killed in the encounter. The military refused to confirm the casualty figure, saying it was “still mopping up the operation”.

    A defence source said: “Troops this morning successfully crushed another attempt by terrorists who were on a revenge mission to Konduga, after 12 hours of fighting on the outskirts of the Borno State community.

    “Troops are now combing the vicinity, in a cordon-and-search operation to determine the heavy casualties suffered by the terrorists in the encounter.”

    Three Hilux trucks, one Armoured Personnel Carrier (APC) and a cache of arms and ammunition were  captured by the troops.

    Another source spoke of how after a fierce battle lasting more than 12 hours on the outskirts of the town, scores of terrorists were killed.

    “The insurgents were desperate to retake Konduga from the troops in order to use it as a platform to attack Maiduguri. It is like engaging them in a fierce battle to prevent them from entering Borno State capital.

    “The battle started on Tuesday night and it stretched till early in the morning on Wednesday.”

    Penultimate Friday, troops killed over 100 Boko Haram insurgents in Konduga, halting their desperate bid to march on Maiduguri.

    The Army confirmed recovery of three Hilux vehicles mounted with machine and anti-aircraft guns, one Mowag Armoured Personnel Carrier and assorted arms and ammunition from the insurgents, in a statement.

    The statement by Brig.-Gen. Olajide Laleye, the Director of Army Public Relations said the recovery was made when troops engaged the insurgents in a fight at Konduga.

    Gen. Laleye said: “During the fight, several terrorists were killed and those fleeing Konduga with gunshot wounds are being pursued,’’ he said.

    The army spokesman said the troops’ morale and combat efficiency remained high and added that further details about the engagement were being awaited.

    According to him, the renewed morale, fighting spirit and combat efficiency of troops have  been boosted by new strategies devised by the armed forces and  the support of the public.

    Gen. Laleye also explained that the “widely reported Boko Haram attack on troops along Okene-Kabba road in Kogi was clearly not a Boko Haram related incident.

    “In reality, the incident was a case of armed robbery attack on troops of 322 Artillery Regiment who were travelling in seven Marcopolo buses to Kontagora for an engagement,’’ he said.

    He said the robbers mistook the soldiers for normal civilian travellers, who plied the route.

    He said three soldiers, who injured during the robbery, were receiving appropriate medical care and would soon join their colleagues,”  Gen. Laleye said.