Tag: boko haram

  • We can crush Boko Haram, says Air Chief

    We can crush Boko Haram, says Air Chief

    The Chief of Air Staff (CAS), Air Marshal Adesola Amosu has assured that the Nigerian Armed Forces have the capacity to crush the Boko Haram insurgency in the Northeastern part of the country as soon as possible.
    Amosu gave the assurance yesterday while receiving the Commandant of the Armed Forces Command and Staff College, Air Vice Marshal John Ifemeje who paid him a courtesy visit in his office.
    The Amosu said there is a synergy between his office and that of the Chief of Army Staff, with the view to designing the appropriate approach to effectively counter the onslaught by the rampaging insurgents.
    The insurgents have killed dozens of innocent Nigerians, including school children, in a string of attacks launched on soft targets in communities in Borno, Yobe and Adamawa States in the last two weeks.
    A statement yesterday by the Director of Public Relations and Information of the Air Force, Air Commodore Yususf Anas, said the Air and Army Chiefs are in constant touch with troops stationed at the troubled states.
    The statement added that the troops are in high spirits and inspired to crush the insurgents in record time, adding that the officers and men in the front lines are being motivated to achieve results.
    The Air Chief hinted of renewed collaboration with other security agencies with the aim of effectively tackling the festering insurgency and restoring normalcy to the affected areas.
    The statement quoted Amosu to have said that the Armed Forces were already thinking of post insurgency plans and strategising on how to “keep the place clean”, to avoid a relapse to the killing spree.
    He was also quoted to have posited that the task in the envisaged post insurgency era would require more technology-based platforms.
    The Air Chief called for commitment of and sacrifice from members of the Armed Forces, as the Federal Government continued to provide funding and support for the campaign.
  • Tambuwal seeks security protection to visit Borno

    Tambuwal seeks security protection to visit Borno

    Worried by mass killing of innocent citizens by Boko Haram, House of Representatives Speaker Aminu Waziri Tambuwal has written the Chief of Defence Staff, Air Marshal Alex Badeh to provide him security to visit the victims.

    He plans to visit on or before Saturday.

    Tambuwal’s request was contained in a March 1 letter to the CDS, which was signed by his Chief of Staff, Hon. Sada Soli Jibia.

    The letter, reads: “I have the honour to refer to the Resolution of the House of Representatives on Tuesday, 18 February, 2014 on the Matter of Urgent Public Importance: Incessant killings of innocent civilians by gunmen in Gwoza, Damboa and Chibok local government areas of Borno State between December 2013 and February 2014 (Copy of the Votes and Proceedings attached).

    “Consequently, the House mandated the Honourable Speaker to visit these places to commiserate with the government and people of the affected areas over the massacre.

    “In view of the foregoing, I am directed to request the Chief of Defence staff to make necessary arrangements on or before Saturday 8th March, 2014 to facilitate the visit of the Honourable Speaker as mandated by the House of Representatives.

    “While expressing my confidence that the Chief of Defence Staff will do everything possible to facilitate this visit, please accept the assurances of the Honourable Speaker’s highest regards.”

    A source in the National Assembly said the Speaker opted to write, following alleged signal from the Presidency to disallow him from visiting the troubled areas.

    The source said: “The Speaker has been trying since January to visit some victims of Boko Haram, but there have been cold shoulders from some people in the presidency.

    “I think for political reasons, some people do not want the Speaker to go to these trouble spots. The real motive of the House is to assess the extent of damage and identify with the victims of Boko Haram.

    “The House leadership felt it is insufficient to leave Borno State Government to face the trauma of managing Boko Haram carnage.

    “The body language of some forces in the Presidency actually accounted for the resolution of the House on February 18, 2014.

    “With the official documentation of the request for the visit as mandated by the House, we are waiting to see whether the CDS will respect this chamber or not.”

    But a source in the Presidency said: “I think they are trying to hang a dog to give it a bad name. Going to any trouble spot is purely a security matter. If the area is not safe, the military will not ask the Speaker or members of the House to take the risk.

    “When it was safer, the government and the military allowed members of the National Assembly to visit Baga last year.

    “I think we should not play politics with the ongoing Boko Haram challenges facing the nation.”

     

  • NSNC 2014 Delegates – We Beg think ‘ A Renewed Nigeria or Ruin’ : Leaders or ‘Greeders’

    NSNC 2014 Delegates – We Beg think ‘ A Renewed Nigeria or Ruin’ : Leaders or ‘Greeders’

    Yet another evil attack on school children in Bama and a market in Maiduguri by Boko Haram. The international community’s multiple satellite surveillance may help locate Boko Haram before they strike.

    Arising from the greedy politics of 50 years, Nigerians are victims of an ‘unjust peace’. Criminal political mathematics involving census figures, 12 2/3, inability to count votes, mal-distribution of LGAs and minority-led governors’ forum are Nigerian fraudulent fiscal federalism.

    Be in no doubt that the great drawbacks to development and entrepreneurship are discriminatory policies of governments since 1967 resulting in a two-tier fraudulent feudal federalism and failed electricity supply. If those two are corrected every Nigerian will feel ‘equal’ and have a high Happiness Factor.

    These drawbacks also point to a generation of past heads of states issuing ‘secret orders’ deliberately setting a ‘Hold Nigeria Back’ agenda – ‘How do we achieve failed federalism and failed centralised grid power while looking as if we are developing?’ This led to the fuel-thirsty generator generation precipitating the 40 year fuel armada enriching the few and pauperising business profits by 10-30%. Because of this, my son grew up in darkness in 1978 which still remains to this day and I operated on a patient with a torch in Lafia. Similarly the ‘How Do We Kill Railways?’ policy implemented by Buhari et al first against Jakande Rail guaranteed northern haulage monopoly especially from the lucrative multibillion naira bridging of fuel prices across the country. Unfortunately roads were ‘Killed’ by contract corruption. Now we die on the roads. This ‘Kill Railway’ policy forced selfish ethnic strategies into government agendas against economic and public good. Our heroes past offered Nigeria little ‘leadership’ and a lot of ‘greediship’ and ethnic domination. We have few ‘leaders’ but many ‘greeders’.

    I am a beggar. I beg for my NGO Educare Trust and people in need and friends dodge me. Every month we must raise N2-300,000 for salaries and services.  People promise but ‘Nothing for you’ as Lagbaja would say. But past beneficiaries of the NGO also do not donate. If they sent Educare N10-100/month each we would have no monthly money pains paying salaries.

    However today I want to ‘Be A Beggar’ with disenfranchised Nigerians begging for a ‘Renewed Nigeria’- the federal Nigeria of our dreams in 1960, ruined by ‘greeders’. To get Nigeria back on track we beg the delegates and secret handlers of the 2014 Non-Sovereign National Conference, 2014 NSNC as follows:

    • We beg for a truthful understanding of why we need a NSNC. Patriotism demands the bitter truth that Nigeria and most Nigerians have been disenfranchised in an unhappy unequal amalgamarriage with a political master-servant society, serial criminal looting, ethnic favouritism, underfunding of infrastructure and political banditry all preventing full potential except in football.

    • We beg you to address the three power failures killing Nigeria –  Over-centralised federal power, electric power  and the power to curb corruption.

    • We beg you to see that Nigerians are not happy with Nigeria-as-is – geographic, political, fiscal, federal. For years biased political machinations have discriminated and poured funds, uneven irrigation strategies, positions, political and civil service power to particular groups which succeeded in their ethnic directives but failed in the national responsibility to move Nigeria forward. The result is widespread dissatisfaction.  For every rich person there are thousands of underachieving undeserving neglected poor.

    • We beg for ‘The Right to 24hour Power’, 100,000Mw within 6-12 months as a right, not a dividend of democracy.

    • We beg for ‘Federal And Fiscal Equity’.

    • We beg for better, stronger anti-corruption measures independent of politics with adequate pursuit and diligent speedy prosecution. If none of us can be corrupt, moral and monetary, without being caught, Nigeria will be a giant.

    • We beg for reduced legal proceedings time, to combat those courts breeding corruption through adjournments and jurisdiction applications.

    • We beg to point out that the country that ‘Cannot Count’ its population, its petroleum barrels production, its money in the CBN is a corruption incubator! Already the federation, its states and LGAs are founded on a census falsehood perpetrated by the military. Nigeria must be counted correctly, perhaps by foreign satellites which can also be used to track the heat signals of Boko Haram convoys and gunmen if we ask them.

    • We beg for a stop to funding of political parties, compulsory deductions of 30-70% for politics, and bigwigs through bogus inflated contracts.

    • We beg to point out that the items under ‘negotiation’ were criminally stolen by past governments from some  Nigerians and given as stolen goods to other Nigerians–Over-centralisation, warped federalism, skewed  LGA creation and ‘Reserved ministries’ included.

    • We beg and demand for the return of said stolen items and a return to status quo ante military rule.

     

    The N-S-NC must choose ‘Renewed Nigeria or RUIN’

    It will take real Nigerian nationalists to know ‘What To Give’ and ‘When To give’ to create this renewed Nigeria. The centralist/feudalists must return that which was seized and approve decentralisation. If not, the expectant country will sink into renewed resentment and ethnic tension. Some delegates are old enough to have caused or witnessed Nigeria’s problems sitting beside patriots struggling to right wrongful political decisions like wickedly biased LGAs and state creation, the long exclusive list and the unsustainable cost of the presidential system. We Nigerians beg and demand that the Conference agrees to the people’s will for a just, better life.

     

     

  • A country at crossroads

    A country at crossroads

    Nigeria is beset with many challenges. The basic tenets of nation-building have been ignored. As the country celebrates 100 years of amalgamation, it is drifting towards anarchy. Deputy Political Editor RAYMOND MORDI reflects on the plight of the most populous African country battling with crises of development.

    Then a convoy of nine new Hilux pick up vans hit the sleepy towns of Shuwa, Kirchinga, Kabla and Michika in Adamawa State last week, with men in military uniform firing sporadically and throwing explosives, security agents at checkpoints scampered for safety. Residents of the communities headed for the hills. The gunmen, according to reports quoting eyewitnesses, are members of the Boko Haram terrorist group, who were exhibiting their regular deeds of madness to sound a note of warning to Nigerian authorities, as world leaders gathered in Abuja last week to witness part of the activities marking the centenary of Nigeria’s amalgamation. Abdul Kassim, a Michika resident, said the militants arrived about 9.30 pm, “armed with rocket propelled grenades and explosives, which they hurled indiscriminately at homes and public buildings.” They burnt three banks, a police station, shops and part of Michika Local Government secretariat, in Michika alone, during the attack which claimed no fewer than 32 lives.

    The night before the Adamawa massacre, the insurgents killed 43 persons, mostly students, in an overnight attack on a boarding school in Yobe State. Like previous ones, the recent coordinated attacks of the sect are their way of registering disaffection with the way the country is being governed. Owing to rising insecurity and breakdown of law and order in the three flashpoint states of Adamawa, Borno and Yobe, the Federal Government declared a state of emergency in those states in May 2013 and launched a military offensive to curtail the activities of the terrorists. Since then, the insurgency, which escalated after the general elections in 2011, has almost degenerated into a full-blown war.

    Besides, as the country gradually approaches the 2015 general elections, different ethnic nationalities have been dropping the hint, every now and then, that they would resort to bloodshed, if things do not go their way politically. As Monday Ubani, chairman, Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), Ikeja Chapter, aptly puts it, the American prediction looms large as the country approaches 2015. He added: “Remember the threats from several geo-political zones; the east is threatening, the north is threatening and the south-south is also threatening… Nigeria is currently sitting on a keg of gunpowder. The disaster that may take place after 2015 may be more than what took place during the civil war, if care is not taken. This is because there is bottled up anger.”

    After 100 years of cohabitation, Nigeria is at crossroads; most of the ethnic nationalities are complaining of being marginalised and want a better deal within the union. For instance, during its 13th annual congress last Thursday, the Yoruba Council of Elders, a non-partisan, non-sectarian and non-profit socio-cultural organisation, declared that the Yoruba are being marginalised in the entity called Nigeria. In the words of the National President of the group, Major-General Adeyinka Adebayo: “In its 100 years of existence, Yoruba people have been relegated from the foremost, most urbanised, most educated, most economically vibrant, most populous and being the first in everything needed for outstanding nation-building, to the state of neglect, deprivation and marginalisation.”

    Indeed, as the country marks the centenary of its amalgamation, it is very evident there is much apprehension and dissatisfaction in the land. For instance, Tanko Yakassai, a former special adviser to President Shehu Shagari and commentator on national issues, is very much disappointed about the way things have turned for the country. He captured his feelings very aptly in the following words: “Countries like Singapore and Malaysia became independent around the same time with Nigeria. But today, they are far ahead of us because we did not stick consistently to running the country on a democratic basis. If democracy had been nurtured and allowed to take root in the country, it would have been a question of competition on the basis of ideas and programmes, not a fierce struggle to grab power at all costs.”

    Nnaemeka Amechina, a Lagos-based legal practitioner, is also disillusioned about the inequality, lack of social justice and discrimination prevalent in the Nigerian society today. He is particularly sad about the varying cut-off marks for admission into public universities in the country, which gives students from a certain part of the country better chances of admission and the issue of state of origin generally that invariably crops up in all facets of life in the country. “This should not be. The people of the country should be able to walk the length and breadth of the country without any limitation,” he lamented, adding: “The country is actually struggling to remain together as one because of the problems of inequality and wrong polity that engenders these inequalities. It is only when there are equal opportunities that everybody can feel committed to the union.”

    Tade Makun, lecturer, Department of Engineering, Offa Polytechnic, Offa, Kwara State, aptly captured the mood of the nation in the following words: “There is palpable anger and frustration. In a land so blessed, it is a great irony that whereas a few, very few, are living prodigally on our common patrimony the vast, indeterminate majority are subjected to the punishing pains of poverty in the midst of plenty!” As the Federal Government embarks on the celebration of the centenary of the amalgamation, Nigerians are getting increasingly exasperated about their country, particularly over the parlous state of the economy and how it is impacting on their daily lives. Year after year, the economy has been posting impressive growth rates, according to government officials, but this has not been impacting positively on their lives.

    With current unemployment rate at 23.9 per cent and unemployed youth population put at 20.3 million, Nigeria has been living on the edge for over five years. A report compiled in December 2008 by the Federal Ministry of Youth Development, stated as of then that the country generated about 4.5 million new entrants into the labour market annually. The figure, it stated, was made up of one million people out of the school system, 2.2 million primary school leavers not proceeding to secondary school, one million secondary school leavers not proceeding to the tertiary level and 300,000 tertiary graduates finding no placement anywhere for productivity. Another survey by the Federal Ministry of Education puts the yearly graduate turnover at over 600,000. Even at that, the official statistical presentation is nothing compared to the reality of the situation.

    It has been generally acknowledged that unemployment is one of the most critical problems facing Nigeria. The years of corruption, civil war, military rule, and mismanagement have hindered economic growth of the country, which is otherwise endowed with diverse and abundant resources, both human and material. Years of negligence and adverse policies have led to the under-utilization of the country’s resources. Most basic amenities and infrastructures are grossly inadequate. In most cases, these are in advanced stages of decay. “From roads, to education, to healthcare, to power supply, to security, the story is the same across the land: Citizens are left to cater to these various needs by their personal resources,” Makun enthused. The unemployment situation is aggravated by the lack of functional infrastructures, the collapse in educational and health sectors.

    With this state of affairs, the energy of the growing army of unemployed youths is being channeled to crime and other anti-social activities. Many observers have described the youth unemployment situation as a bomb waiting to explode. Indeed, the unemployment situation has been blamed for the escalation of the Boko Haram insurgency, ethnic and sectarian violence armed robbery and the rise in spate of kidnappings round the country. According to a report published recently in the Economist, Nigeria had the most kidnap attempts in the world within the first half of 2013, as it accounted for 26 per cent of all such recorded incidents. Mexico was second with 10 per cent, while Pakistan was ranked third with seven per cent of recorded incidents of kidnapping within the period globally.

    While progress in curbing the spate of violence has been appallingly slow, the road to the 2015 general elections continues to be laden with mantraps. Apart from terrorism and other violent crimes, geo-political power contest, particularly within the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) at the centre is a major threat to the country’s existence as a nation.

    How did the country arrive at this sorry pass? In the opinion of Ubani, after reading a recent book written by Olusegun Adeniyi, the former spokesman of late President Umaru Yar’Adua titled “Politics, Power and Death”, he has come to the inescapable conclusion that what is troubling Nigeria are too many and would therefore require several approaches to tackle them effectively. “To start with, there was no foundation laid for this nation. The British were driven away and they left in a hurry and in our bid to take over their position and the country, no serious thought was spared for the foundation of the country,” he argued.

    As a result, Ubani added, symptoms of a poorly planned country manifested early after the flag independence, which culminated into an unnecessary civil war that caused lives and materials. “The country has never been a sane country after the pogrom and civil war. The military leaders who took over went on stealing spree and surpassed by the civilian bureaucrats and politicians. Selfish, thieving and morally bankrupt leaders have actually been the bane of Nigeria,” the NBA chairman noted. Rather than build on what the whites left behind, he argued further, “our successive leaders have destroyed and stolen almost all the resources of the country.”

    Makun, on the other hand, is categorical in his submission that the reason for Nigeria’s failure to attain true greatness, in spite of her potentials, is absence of a National Vision, coupled with the depressing selfishness and greed of the misruling elite. To Yakassai, however, there are a lot of factors responsible for this. One of the factors, he reiterated, is the fact that successive leaders have not been able to run the country on a democratic basis for a long time after independence. The result, he argued, was that most of the development programmes fashioned by the country’s founding fathers as a way of uplifting the wellbeing of the people were jettisoned midway.

    For instance, he said the administration of Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa, the first prime minister of Nigeria, started with about five or six of such programmes. “He conceived the idea of restructuring Kainji Dam in three phases, for the purpose of power generation and irrigation. Since he was killed in the coup d’état, successive leaders did not implement the programme of restructuring Kainji Dam; they were not even able to complete the first phase,” he said, adding: “If the three phases had been completed, enough power would have been generated for the industrialization of the country.”

    In the area of transportation, Balewa, Yakassai observed, conceived the idea of extending the railway system to all parts of the country, such as from Jos to Bauchi, Gombe and Borno. Apart from the first phase, from Jos to Maiduguri, the octogenarian noted that all the other components of the railway extension project, which would connected parts of the South-west to the South-east and the South-south, were abandoned after the coup in 1966. “There was also the idea of dredging the River Niger to accommodate ocean-going vessels and thereby make the transport of goods and persons cheaper through the waterways. Since his demise, that idea has been abandoned.

    Yakassai also noted that politicians see elections merely as an opportunity to grab power, instead of one of providing service to the people. “It is unfortunate that in our democracy we spend much of the time fighting who should run for an office, rather than allowing the ideas and programmes of the aspirants to determine who gets the ticket,” he added. For instance, he said Nigeria has about five or six major political parties today, “but if you look closely you’ll find that there is no marked difference between Party A and Party B and so on, in terms of ideology and programmes.” He explains: “You will find out that what is happening in one party is equally happening in the other parties. Take the issue of local government elections, for instance. Almost all the parties are averse to holding elections when due. When they do hold such elections, the party in power employs everything at its disposal to put its men in power in all the local governments, irrespective of the strength of the opposition.”

    Felix Morka, executive director, Socio-Economic Rights and Action Centre, SERAC, agrees with Yakassai, when he said people with selfish interest are running the country. “Their interest is merely to build up their personal wealth, and use such wealth to get more political and with their political power to expand their personal wealth,” he noted.

    In line with Ubani and Yakassai’s positions, one of the things that have destroyed productivity and the healthy rivalry that existed among the regions that constituted the federating units following independence in 1960 was basically the change in revenue sharing formula at the outset of the war in 1967. This was a politically expedient policy that was introduced then to accumulate more funds at the centre to prosecute the civil war. Indeed, the years following independence in 1960 have been dubbed the country’s golden era. Then, the country was divided into three regions (later four with the creation of the defunct Mid West), with each one having autonomy over its affairs in many respects. Back then every region had its own plans for generating revenue internally via agriculture and other activities. Today, in contrast, most of the 36 states that were created subsequently are almost solely dependent on oil money that is distributed by the central government. With the present situation of things, that widespread desire that propelled the federating units to be as productive and self-sufficient as possible no longer exists.

     

  • Wanted: A war cabinet    

    Wanted: A war cabinet    

    It was a catalogue of deaths and destruction last week when the Boko Haram terrorists went on a killing-spree in the three Nigeria’s northeast states of Yobe, Adamawa and Borno. The attacks started on Tuesday at the Federal Government College, Buni Yadi, Yobe State, where no fewer than 43 students were killed. From there, they moved to Shuwa, in Magadali Local Government Area of Adamawa state where a teachers’ college, a secondary school and a Catholic covent were attacked. By Saturday, it was the turn of Maiduguri, the Borno State capital, where a twin-bomb explosion tore through the heart of the city, killing more than 50 people. Mainok, a village about 50 kilometers from Maiduguri, also had a taste of the orgy of violence and blood-letting.

    The attack on the Government College, Buni Yadi, bore the full imprimatur of a similar one on Saturday, September 28, 2013 at the College of Agriculture, Guijba, in the same state. In that attack, more than 50 students of the school met their untimely death. The terrorists attacked the college at midnight when most of the students were deeply asleep. That also, was not without precedence. In June 2013, the terrorists killed eight pupils and a teacher during an attack on Government Secondary School, Damaturu, capital of Yobe State. They also killed 29 pupils at Government Secondary School, Mamudo, also in the state.

    On Saturday, April 13, 2013, an unspecified number of students of Monguno Secondary School, in Monguno Local Government of Borno State, were killed as they returned home on foot and bicycles from the centres where they wrote the West African Examination Council (WAEC) Senior Secondary Certificate Examination (SSCE). Before that daylight massacre, six secondary school teachers, including a principal, were also hacked down by the terrorists in the same local government area.

    It is sad that our so-called security forces have always been caught napping each time these marauders come calling. In the killings of the school children who were accosted on their way from their examination centres in April 2013, no security agent was sighted at the scene of the slaughtering until more than three hours later. The same scenario has played out again and again. It was the same story at the School of Agriculture, Gujba. In the recent incident at FGC, Buni Yadi, the killers did not only have the luxury of time to carry out their devilish act, they also proved that they were out to destroy the hopes of tomorrow by separating the girls from the boys. While they mowed down the boys, they simply drove the girls away from school and advised them to go and get married instead of wasting their time at school. That is true to their name Boko Haram, which means “education is bad.”

    What is more sickening in all these, especially in last week’s incident, is the fact that the security agents who were stationed within the proximity of the schools left their checkpoints shortly before the terrorists came calling. Now, the security agents are running helter-skelter to unravel those who might have been complicit in the attacks among the local populace. Talk of medicine after death. By the way, why is it that these security agents, with the hordes of intelligence officers in their midst, have never for once nipped these attacks in the bud while the so-called rag-tag terrorists are daily giving them a bloody nose?

    There must be something wrong somewhere. It is either a failure of intelligence or non-intelligence at all, as the case may be (if I am permitted to put it that way). It is obvious that some people are aiding and abetting these criminals within the local population and among the security agents as well. For how long will the blood of our children be spilled like rotten milk on the altar of greed, selfishness and vaulting ambition of our overfed politicians both in uniform and babaringa? Every time, you hear about a fleet of vehicles consisting of more than 10 or 15 attacking a particular location. Why is it impossible for the security forces to pick them as they move along? I am quite aware that because of the dry season, almost everywhere in the affected areas is motorable at this time, but if the security forces are doing their work well, these terrorists should still be spotted.

    It is rather superfluous that while the brigandage and blood-letting that have been going on in the northeast of the country in the last four or five years (2009 – 2014) continue to spiral out of control, up till this moment, no single person has either been fingered or arrested on account of being the sponsor of this brazen terrorism against our fatherland. The other day, a former governor of one of the states in the Northeast was allegedly arrested in Cameroun by a Camerounian security officer who said he was convinced that the former governor is one of the financiers of the Boko Haram insurgency. The former governor was arrested on his way to see the governor of Northern Cameroun.

    Although the former governor in question was later released by an order from the Vice-President of Cameroun, after he quickly reached out to people, he is strongly suspected to have played a role in the rise of Boko Haram in the first instance and so, it will be difficult to isolate him from the unrelenting assault of the criminal gangs on the country. There is also this belief that this former governor may not be a Nigerian as he is said to hail from neighbouring Chad Republic, where he currently operates an airline and maintains a mansion. After his tenure as governor many years back, it was to Chad that he went to cool off and observe developments in Nigeria from the sideline until his recent visit to the country which sparked off a wave of violence in his native state.

    By now, I believe the security agencies should have the list of suspects who are collaborating with these terrorists in one way or another to wreak havoc on unsuspecting Nigerians, but, perhaps, because of political expediency, nobody wants to touch them. That is why some people think that if the President announces today that he will not be contesting the 2015 presidential election, the whole Boko Haram brouhaha will die a natural death. Since the President has an inalienable right to contest as President a second time as enshrined in the 1999 Constitution in use in the country, if he wishes, the onus is on the security agencies to do their work properly and contain this avoidable carnage that has continued to cast a dark spot on the image of the country. The only way out of this quagmire in which the country has been enmeshed all this while is the urgent need for the President to form a war cabinet.

    In the first instance, the troops which were deployed to the theatre of war in the Northeast went there purely for peacekeeping operation. Now the whole scenario has snowballed into a real war situation. Therefore, the strategy must change. A senior cabinet minister must coordinate the ‘war’. As things are now, it may be impossible for the National Security Adviser, NSA, the only person who probably performs the role of coordinating the military interventions in the Northeast, to summon any of the head of the services to a meeting – I mean summoning someone like the Chief of Army Staff or the Chief of Air Staff that are both involved in managing the crisis to a meeting – not to talk of the Chief of Defence Staff. They will just ignore him because the NSA is more or less a Staff Officer to the President. That is why there is need to quickly put a war cabinet in place.

    The war cabinet, as envisaged, will consist of seasoned Generals, both serving and retired, as well as some respectable and responsible civilians, whose duty will be to take care of the political angle to this festering crisis. It is time to end this genocide!

  • 45 killed again Boko Haram

    45 killed again Boko Haram

    Insurgents suspected to be members of the Boko Haram sect Tuesday  attacked  Jakana village killing forty five people including little kids.

    The armed men who came with explosives and petrol-bombs in 21 Toyota Hilux vehicles and motorcycles also killed two policemen who were busy trying to repel them from their stations.

    Properties destroyed during Monday’s multiple attacks on the soul of Jakana village include Police posts, a primary school, mosques and several mud huts of the poor villagers who inhabit the sleepy settlement.

    The raid on Jakana which is on the busy Maiduguri-Damaturu road about 40 kilometers from the capital city kept commuters coming by commercial vehicle from Jos, Bauchi Gombe and Potiskum stranded on the Damaturu-Maiduguri road while some of them were  said to have turned back to Damaturu on hearing of the bloodletting spree.

    Reliable sources said the insurgents are believed to have been the same group which attacked Mainok last Saturday where they also slaughtered 39 people before setting nearby Jakana village ablaze yesterday killing women and children in the process.

    An eyewitness and resident of Jakana, Baba Mala Modu in a telephone chat with newsmen Tuesday said that the insurgents stormed the village at 10pm Monday with explosives and petrol-bombs, chanting ‘Allah Uakbar’ God is great in Arabic, shooting sporadically into the air to scare the people before setting their houses ablaze for three hours.

    “The gunmen came in large numbers in their usual Toyota Hilux vehicles and motorcycles shooting, killing and at the same time pouring petrol on our huts and setting fire on it.

    “The women who were captured started crying for help, but no one was there to salvage them from these multiple attacks and killings. Some of us had to flee towards the neighboring villages, farmlands and bushes to hide our families.

    “I am talking to you now from a hiding place in the bush. I cannot get into the village, but the number of bodies pulled out from the torched houses, were about 35 this morning; and more bodies could be retrieved before noon today (Tuesday), because several people were trapped in their huts out of fear even as the insurgents unleashed havoc on them,” he screamed on the phone.

    “Some of the fleeing villagers; trekked to Maiduguri for fear of their lives, while others took refuge in the neighboring villages with absolutely no protection from security agents throughout the cold night.”

    He told reporters that there were no soldiers in the village when the attackers struck, adding that the policemen at the station  were overpowered and killed by the damning weapons of the sect,  while repelling the intruders of the night.

    “The soldiers rushed to the village in the morning in their patrol vehicles, and condoned off the Maiduguri-Damaturu road for two hours, before motorists were allowed to pass the destroyed village in which over 35 people were slain, including 15 women and children between the
    ages of nine and twelve,” said Modu.

    The Maiduguri twin blasts of last Saturday claimed 53 lives, the weekend and Monday’s attacks in Mainok, Jakana villages and  Mafa town also claimed the lives of 120 people, including two policemen.

    More charred corpses were said to have been fished out of the sad event as the combing exercise of the military progresses.

    JTF spokes person Colonel Dole could not be reached as at the time of filing this report

     

  • Don wants more soldiers for Borno

    A Don and Chairman of the Academic Staff Union of University (ASUU), University of Maiduguri branch, Dr Musa Abdulahi has called for the increase of the military presence in Borno to enable the government get to the bottom of the insurgency plague.

    He told The Nation in Maiduguri that the management of the war by the 7th division was cosmetic and was hardly getting to the roots of the matter which he said seems to be getting out of hand.

    He warned that fishing out Borno and changing the political leadership of the state will not take care of the sympathy of the masses being killed or exposed to insurgences when the military has not been able to address a quarter of the fundamental problem of slaughter of our people in cold blood.

    The Academic noted that bringing a military Administrator will rather worsen the situation as he would be more protective of his soldiers than the people he is sent to look over as is now manifest on the sambisa battle field.

    Dr Abdullahi regretted that it is sycophancy that will make anybody to suggest that a solely military solution will end this insurgency when it has been clear that the soldiers are not well equipped and are more protective of themselves which is why they run away at sighting the weapons of the insurgents leaving them to slaughter the civilians like chicken.

    “What I think is important now that they are deploying military, is that they should make it full scale and if they are willing to use the political angle we should see it in a holistic thing and not piece meal and which is what we are seeing. They should stop all this piecemeal deployment and declare a full scale operation and get to the root of this thing if they have the capacity to do so. from what we are seeing, after the sacking of Bama town, killing some of our people for hours without the intervention of the military barracks in the town, it is clear they are yet to give us something new.

    “The president who is there commander in chief should not be deterred by any form of sentiment to operate as the real commander in chief because the people being killed are Nigerians not foreigners and the killers are surely not Muslims because no matter how useless a Muslim is you do not assemble people inside a place of worship as a mosque and kill them in the name of religion, it is not permissible” he maintained.

    The Asuu boss regretted that President, Goodluck Jonathan have not exercised the necessary will power to indicate that he can handle this thing either militarily or politically which s why the killing with impunity continues almost five year after.

    “We believe the will power has to be there before he consults or take any step of progress. If he eschews political, ethnic differences and look at Nigeria as one entity, he will surely succeed and no power anywhere can stop him, but if he looks at it as brothers killing brothers. so what is my business? so be it. These insurgents are killing our people on a daily basis, targeting businesses, shops, markets, farms, and all forms of commercial sectors to impoverish the people and this has gone on for four years plus yet they release the soldiers on a piecemeal basis.

    “If a minimum of 5,000 soldiers should be released to surround this people and what they stand for, they cannot tell us they cannot route them off from the Nigerian soil. I mean a proper cordon from Maiduguri to Dambua and then to Barma, Gwaza and the border, there is no way they will not be able to get the people. But this annoying piecemeal release as if we do not have enough military personnel is worrisome” the sociologist noted.

    “Look, the government through its intelligence is saying that the insurgents have sophisticated weapons, which weapons are they talking about? Is it that the Nigerian military does not have sophisticated weapons to match this people? I think, it is high time the federal government wakes up from its slumber and begin to realize that they are the earthly custodian of the people in terms of security and do what it takes to route these people out.

    “This is also the time for them to overhaul the military weaponry completely because we live in a sophisticated world and these insurgents have people who bring weapons to them in the bush with helicopters or can they deny knowledge of this? The Americans now use rifles which enables them to see in the night for instance in handling theirs, why cant the government upgrade what our boys are using because most of them have lost the morale boast to fight and i don’t blame them.

    “You want to know why? It is because they do not see their commanders fighting alongside them as a result of crimogenic tendencies. Crime inducing tendencies by operation, conception and vision. this is why the Nigerian security cant fight crime because it is part of the crime infested society. A society that celebrates political personalities after their corrupt tendencies. The second reason is due to political economy. Billions or rather trillions have been spent managing security but nobody can say he has actually seen the iimpact of the funds and that is the reality.

    “Those in the centre are enjoying the situation because they have billions to play with and loot what they can, making money you would say at the expense of the common people.

    “The military has a culture in which the subordinate cannot question their authority yet the subordinates are watching the life styles of these same superiors who are supposed to be fighting along side them but are holed up in five star hotels in Maiduguri, you know what i am talking about.

    “How then do you expect the boys to be loyal? Go to town and check out the best hotels in GRA like Desert and Pinnacle, they are holed up with their girl friends spending their time indoors as if they were sent here on holiday instead of actually checking out on the sufferings of their boys who see all these going on. They only use telephones to know what is going on and life contiues for the masses who are waiting to be slaughtered in the next village.”

    According to the Sociologist, this psychological suffering by the lower ranks brings about a lot of dis-balance thereby questioning loyalty in the brain of the military personnel on the field.

    He alleged that the crop of soldiers that have been managing the insurgency in the north east have not shown much loyalty to the service like their counterparts most of whom paid the supreme price in other countries where they were sent to fight.

    “This is why the contemporary soldier is not 100 percent loyal to his work here or even ready to die for his country so that others will live in peace. Gone are the days when soldiers were being loyal to the common cause through discipline. What we see now are fragmented soldiers and officers over protective of themselves first before the people they are supposed to protect”

    The former joint task force JTF which handed over to the 7th division, which is a new creation by the President has been seen as more effective than the division which is supposed to take charge of command duties and which is he sole custodian of security when the Government of Borno state lost that function to them as a result of the declaration of a state of emergency last May.

  • Boko Haram: Hunters comb bush for pupils

    Boko Haram: Hunters comb bush for pupils

    32 die as sect sacks village

    Parents protest in Lagos

    How bomb suspect was seized

    Many pupils of the Federal Government College Buni Yadi, Yobe State, are still missing – one week after a night attack on their dormitory by Boko Haram insurgents.

    No fewer than 43 pupils are believed to have been killed in the attack, which has attracted wide condemnation, including a protest yesterday in Lagos. Many were injured. Some of the pupils were burnt beyond recognition by the fire set to the hostel by the insurgents. Those who attempted to flee the attack were shot.

    Parents of pupils who are not among the dead and the injured have been asking for the whereabouts of their wards and children.

    The Yobe State government set up a committee, led by Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice Ahmed Mustapha Goniri, which has engaged hunters and herdsmen to comb bushes for missing pupils. The plan is to find them alive or recover their bodies.

    Goniri, who hails from the area, spoke yesterday of the “collaboration with hunters in search of missing pupils in the bush”.

    He said the measure became necessary because “many parents are still complaining of not seeing their children after the attack”.

    The commissioner added: “We decided to make this contact with the hunters and some herdsmen in the area because some parents have come up to lodge complaints that they have not seen their children since the attack.

    “Though we have not received a report of any student found in the bush, we are working on the assumption that some of them may have run into the bush for dear lives.

    “We have also contacted vigilance groups to give any information to the village heads and religious leaders for rapid action.”

    The commissioner said Yobe government was committed to bringing succour to the victims of the attack.

    “As you are aware, Governor Ibrahim Gaidam donated N100m to members of the staff affected in the attack. This is just one aspect. The government is committed to assisting the victims. The governor will continue to do everything within the confines of its resources to bring succour to the families and victims,” he said.

    After a weekend of violence in which no fewer than 90 people were killed, in what has now become a daily attack on Borno State, the insurgents killed 32 people in another attack on another village, on Sunday night.

    Soldiers, outgunned by suspected Boko Haram insurgents, reportedly fled Mafa, leaving residents to their deadly fate.

    Thatched roofs were set ablaze as gunmen rolled into town, shooting at about 8 p.m., witnesses said. All homes, shops and government buildings were destroyed.

    Senator Ahmed Zannah said two policemen were killed in a bomb blast early yesterday, as they attempted to rescue other victims.

    Zannah said a week before the attack, most Mafa residents fled their homes after leaflets were dropped in the village, warning of imminent danger. He said seven soldiers are believed to be missing.

    It also emerged yesterday that the alleged “mastermind” of last Saturday Maiduguri twin-bomb explosions was arrested after missing his way.

    The mastermind was said to be driving a bomb-laden Golf car to the Artillery Unit of the Nigerian Army in Maiduguri when the vehicle exploded.

    The military was working on the theory that the Golf Car was carrying timed bombs.

    A military source confirmed that the Boko Haram insurgents struck between Sunday night and Monday morning in Mafa village.

    The military said it was still taking stock of the attack, making it “too early to give casualty figures”.

    A top source said: “The village of Mafa was actually attacked by the insurgents on Sunday night till the early hours of Monday. It was a massive raid by Boko Haram.

    “The report we got yesterday morning was that the entire village was wiped out but we are still investigating this claim.

    “We have not got the clear picture of the situation. We are in a circumstance whereby you hear all sorts of reports but in the military, we usually take stock before we make public confirmation.”

    Preliminary investigation into last Saturday’s twin-bomb explosions in Maiduguri indicated that the arrested “mastermind” was heading to Artillery Unit barracks in the city.

    Another source said: “While one of the vehicles was a van carrying firewood, the other was a Golf car going to one of the Artillery units in Maiduguri.

    “Since there are two Artillery units in Maiduguri, the arrested ‘mastermind’ could not find his way.

    “He decided to alight from the car to ask the locals in Ngomari-Bulukumtu Quarters of his way to one of the Artillery units. As he was doing that, the Golf car exploded. The explosion coincided with that of the van carrying firewood.

    “The residents of the area were vigilant enough to arrest the suspect, handing him over to the military.”

    It was gathered that a Chadian and a Cameroonian were arrested yesterday in Jos as part of the manhunt for fleeing Boko Haram members.

    A military source said: “We have been on the trail of fleeing Boko Haram members and we arrested a Chadian and a Cameroonian in Jos.

    “This development has confirmed that some foreigners have been recruited by the insurgents.”

     

  • APC to presidency: don’t profit from Boko Haram insurgency

    APC to presidency: don’t profit from Boko Haram insurgency

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) has said the failed attempt by a presidential aide, Reno Omokri, to link suspended CBN Governor Sanusi Lamido Sanusi to the heightened attacks by Boko Haram, has shown the presidency may be seeking to profit, politically and otherwise, from the insurgency that has dispatched thousands to their early graves.

    In a statement issued yesterday in Lagos by its Interim National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, the party said Omokri’s attempt to push an article he authored into the public domain, using a fake name, is the clearest indication yet that the Presidency has a case to answer and may have been feeding Nigerians with doctored information.

    It said the attempt to blame the recent spate of attacks by Boko Haram on Sanusi raises some pertinent questions: Is the presidency trying to gain political mileage from the death of innocent Nigerians, including school children, whom it could not protect? Could this be why the government has largely treated the insurgency with levity, especially in its early days? Does the presidency know more than it is telling Nigerians on Boko Haram? Is there a government Boko Haram that acts on instructions from some quarters? Is anyone in government profiting financially from the battle against Boko Haram that they may be sabotaging efforts to end the insurgency?

    ‘’The best way to know the answers to these questions is for the State Security Service to immediately arrest and question Omokri on why he was trying to act by subterfuge to misinform Nigerians, how long he has been engaged in this shameful and irresponsible act, what his connections are, if any, with Boko Haram, and whether or not his handlers, including the President, approve of his chicanery,’’ APC said.

    The party said Omokri’s dangerous game should be seen within the context of some curious coincidence between several past Boko Haram attacks and certain low moments and/or at critical junctures in the administration of President Jonathan, giving the impression of an unseen hands playing the puppeteer.

    Giving some instances, it said the Jan. 20th 2012 deadly attacks in Kano that left about 162 dead occurred at the height of the fuel subsidy protests that shut down the country; the Christmas Day attack in Suleja that killed about 37 people and injured 57 seems to be a distraction from the series of deadly attacks that had rocked the country earlier; the fact that Boko Haram struck within days of Alaemieyeseigha and Diyarbakir amnesty that attracted widespread criticism, and then the resurgence of Boko Haram that coincided with Sanusi’s suspension.

    ‘’The coincidences become even more curious when viewed against the apparently informed statements by two Governors in the North-east, where recent attacks have been concentrated. First, Borno Governor Kashim Shettima called attention to the fact that we need to do more to fortify our troops if they are to defeat Boko Haram, only for the statement to be twisted out of context and a vicious offensive launched against him by presidential attack dogs

    ‘’Secondly, Gov. Murtala Nyako of Adamawa, himself a retired military top brass, wondered aloud why the checkpoint near the FGC in Yobe was removed before the attack and who ordered the removal? Why the authorities have not been able to trace the deadly weapons being used by Boko Haram to the manufacturers? Who transports the weapons and how is that possible when the states affected are under a state of emergency? why retired Gen. Shuwa was killed and the army failed to respond during the attack on his residence, and why the air force base in Maiduguri was attacked even with an army unit nearby

    ‘’Thirdly, the fact that the attacks have spiked as we move closer to the 2015 elections, and a presidential aide is trying to link a perceived enemy of the Jonathan Administration to the insurgency suggest the government may be viewing the terrorist attacks as a wild card to be leveraged one way or the other ahead of the elections,’’ APC said.

    The party said while these are complex issues, the first step in resolving them should start with Omokri, the President’s Social Media attack dog who may have now overreached himself!

  • The Centenary Celebrations:  another elite jamboree

    The Centenary Celebrations: another elite jamboree

    The binge is on and those close to he powers that be are at it again strutting about and laughing to the banks even though we are told that the centenary celebrations are sponsored by the private sector. Those who milk us dry to the marrow always have justificatory excuses to give in their consistent manipulations that negatively affect the good people of Nigeria. The promoters and beneficiaries of the on-going centenary celebrations are inured to the damnable condition of life in Nigeria manifested by an acute unemployment that has ballooned to as high as 37.7%, gruesome killings of innocent citizens by the Boko Haram bandits, kidnappings, oil-theft, a resurgent fuel scarcity, epileptic power supply (in spite of the new owners of the former PHCN), and sundry life-threatening activities that have daily defined the people’s existence. The ruling elite and their friends and supporters must exploit every opportunity to their advantage. And so, one hundred years of Nigeria’s existence must surely be celebrated.

    In their usual hurry to take advantage of every situation, lame duck officials always mess things up raising more questions than answers. Otherwise, how can one explain the inclusion of the late General Sanni Abacha as a Centenary awardee? General Abacha, it must be remembered was one of those in league with the ‘’dribbling’’ General Ibrahim Banbagida who denied Nigerians of their choice of leader when Babangida’s regime flagrantly and criminally annulled the 1993 Presidential election clearly won by the business mogul, the late M.K.O Abiola. Apart from working in cahoots with the evil General, Sanni Abacha continued from where Babangida stopped, throwing bombs here and there and stealing without qualms. Abacha’s loot stashed away in many countries of the world is yet to be fully recovered by the Nigerian government. The pertinent questions that arise are: Do we need to celebrate characters like Abacha? Is it not shameful that after all the shenanigans of Abacha, Nigeria’s current leaders showcase him as one of our heroes past? Is it not strange that Abacha occupies the same space in our pantheon of icons as the likes of Gani Fawehinmi, Fela Ransom-Kuti and other shinning men and women of virtue living or dead? Why have we gone so low as a nation?

    It must be stressed that those who have hijacked the Nigerian society at all levels of its life appear to be the tenth eleven with mediocre dispositions in all their assignments. It is laughable that a scholar of Richard Olaniyan’s stature will be completely left out of matters concerning the 1914 Amalgamation of the Southern and Northern Protectorates. Professor Olaniyan, a distinguished Diplomatic Historian who retired from the prestigious Department of History, Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, some years ago has written quite extensively on issues bordering on the Amalgamation. He edited a book with its comprehensive totality entitled: The Amalgamation and its Enemies and many academic monographs and essays in Journals and books including a chapter entitled ‘Disamalgamation: A Chronicle of the Codes and Conduct of its Advocates’ in a forth-coming book edited by Ayoade Bunmi and Adesanya Adeoye.

    The most annoying and insulting aspect of the list of awardees is the deliberate exclusion of the late Lieutenant Colonel Adekunle Fajuyi, the first Military Governor of the then Western Region of Nigeria who sacrificed his life for his visitor, colleague, fellow compatriot, friend and Commander – in- Chief. It is instructive to note that Colonel Adekunle Fajuyi would not have been brutally eliminated, if he wanted to play coy, by allowing Theophilus Danjuma and company to kill Aguiyi Ironsi.It is indisputable that the Danjuma group was on an insensate and wicked revenge mission over the January 1966 Coup d’etat seen in many circles as a nationalist movement to rescue the country from the vice gip of corruption and mis-governance. There is no doubt that the late Fajuyi was a man of honour whose bonhomie was matchless and superbly great.

    Fajuyi’s Christ–like display of sacrifice is peerless in the history of Nigeria. His fidelity to friendship is a value that needs to be drummed into the ears of Nigerians especially the young Nigerians who have become dis-enchanted with the high level of thievery and other forms of impunity that have characterised Nigerian life over the years. Arguably, there is no Nigerian leader, living or dead that has demonstrated the profundity of love, sacrifice, patriotism and selflessness that Fajuyi effortlessly but remarkably gave to humanity. Leaders of Fajuyi’s hue are rare to find in this clime of charlatans who always take refuge in their ethnic cocoons to protect their undeserved interests.

    Today’s Nigeria is one in which the dirty past of some people does not count but what they have been able to acquire politically and economically. Looking at the Centenary Awardees’ list, one feels appalled and ruefully concerned that included in the list are some of the mutineers who killed Fajuyi and his august guest, General Umunnakwe Aguiyi Ironsi. Some of these people have become political leaders and operators of the Nigerian economy, owning the commanding heights of the economy. They are the owners of oil blocks, insurance and financial institutions, universities, big farms and firms, shipping and fishing companies among other big profit- making organisations across the world. With their obscene wealth they are able to negotiate a space in all spheres of Nigerian life.

    It is not surprising that the list is littered with names of these categories of people who by their various acts of omission and commission have injured the country. These elements do not believe in the Nigerian idea. Because the country has been rigged and ravished in their favour they posture about and corner every available space and resources to themselves at the expense of the majority of the people.

    But all hope is not lost if the latest news from the families of the Afro-beat King, Fela Anikulapo-Kuti and Gani Fawehinmi is anything to go by. The rejection of the awards by these two great families casts a slur on the awardees’ list. One will not be surprised if Achebe’s family does the same thing. Achebe had twice while alive strongly rejected the national awards offered him by the Nigerian government because of his insistence that the country should be run properly along the lines of probity, accountability, democratic norms, transparency and rule of law. These values of civility have been assaulted by the Nigerian ruling clique with their supporters. Chinua Achebe, the highly celebrated prose stylist will tumble in his grave to hear that he and the thieving General Abacha will be garlanded in the same fashion by mimic men and women who are in charge of the affairs of Nigeria. Meanwhile, the government that is honouring Abacha as a Centenary award winner is also at the same time claiming to be doing everything humanly possible to recover humongous sums of money stolen and stashed away in foreign banks by Abacha.

    As the government and its supporters celebrate their centenary activities with éclat and joy, it is meet to wish them well and to insist that Fajuyi has been ‘killed’ the second time by the unconscionable Nigerian ruling elite who glories in all kinds of sybaritic activities at the expense of the people in particular and Nigeria in general.

     

    • Uwasomba is of the Department of English, Obafemi Awolowo University Ile