Tag: boko haram

  • Lagos terrorists’ threat

    Lagos terrorists’ threat

    In the book, The Olive Tree, Aldous Huxley, 1894 – 1936, an English writer, said: “The most shocking fact about war is that its victims and its instruments are individual human beings and that these individuals are condemned by the monstrous conventions of politics to murder or be murdered in quarrels not their own.” Going by Huxley’s submission, the current scourge of terrorism that is ravaging the entire globe could be attributed to politics of various colours and dimensions. In some places, it is religious rivalry; in others it could be the struggle for political control or domination. Whichever way it is viewed, human rivalries, over the years, have found expression in violence, be it terrorism, assassination, arson, outright war or any other despicable criminal activities.

    In Nigeria, we have witnessed so many conflicts all over the place. When it is not tribal or ethnic rivalry, it is religion or politics. Today, the whole country has become one huge theatre of war. In Plateau State, it is both tribal and ethnic rivalry that has almost turned the place into modern-day George Orwell’s ‘animal farm’, where life is miserably short and brutish. This internecine war has paralysed the socio-economic life of its once bustling capital city, Jos. Further north is the unrelenting carnage being unleashed on defenceless and innocent people, especially in the three north-eastern states of Adamawa, Borno and Yobe by the Boko Haram insurgents. Not even a state of emergency declared on the three states since May last year has been able to restore law and order. The whole thing has degenerated into a sort of guerrilla warfare in which elements of Boko Haram now make occasional incursions into isolated villages and hamlets, leaving deaths and destruction in their trail.

    Recently, new service chiefs were appointed to replace the former ones who had prosecuted the war against these terrorists without success. While taking over as the new Chief of Defence Staff, CDS, at the Defence Headquarters, Abuja, on January 20, Alex Badeh, an Air Marshal, assured Nigerians that the military would bring the Boko Haram insurgency in the country to an end before April this year. The CDS said that this was possible if the military approached its security responsibilities cohesively. He told the new Chief of Army Staff, Major-General Kenneth Minimah, who is expected to coordinate the fight against the insurgents, that it was possible for his work to be concluded in a short time. Badeh also gave the assurance that the other service chiefs – Air-Vice Marshal Adesola Amosun and Rear Admiral Usman Jubrin, Chief of Air Staff and Chief of Naval Staff respectively, would give the requisite support to the Army chief in the prosecution of the campaign to end terrorism in the country.

    From events that followed, it was obvious that Badeh was merely basking in the euphoria of the moment. The new CDS’ assurance was taken with a pinch of salt as various commentators on national affairs took him to task on the validity of his promise to end terrorism in the North-east in three months. When the commentaries became unbearable, the authorities at the Defence Headquarters, Abuja, rose to his defence. As if in a volte-face, Chris Olukolade, a Major-General and Director of Defence Information, admitted that it was not possible for terrorism to be brought to an end anywhere in the world with a specific directive. He said that the CDS was aware of the complex nature of the problem of terrorism and was optimistic that the problem could be brought under control with the vigour and readiness of the new service chiefs when he made the statement.

    The denial by the Defence Headquarters coincided with an alleged plot by the Boko Haram terrorist group to invade Lagos. The terrorists were said to be planning to infiltrate the state in vehicles painted with military colours. This is worrisome. Some months ago, a terrorist group allegedly conveyed weapons to Lagos inside some of the numerous fuel tankers that ply major roads to the country’s former capital and indeed the nation’s commercial nerve centre. A raid carried out some months ago by security agents saved residents of Lagos and Ogun states from possible attacks by the terrorists.

    The joint raid led to the arrest of some suspects who are members of the Boko Haram sect.

    Before the latest threat, security agents had uncovered and dismantled the plot by the alleged terrorists to plant cells in the western part of the country with Lagos as the headquarters. Security operatives, who later briefed the National Assembly leaders last year about the reality of the planned invasion of Lagos, told the federal legislators that indeed the attackers had planned to cripple the economy. The security chiefs told the federal legislators that some of the attackers captured had hinted that the plot was deliberate: to cripple the nerve centre of the country’s commerce and industry, a city that hosts the international air and seaports, so that the nation’s economy could collapse.

    The federal legislators were thoroughly alarmed by the revelation about the sense of urgency of the insurgents to hit Lagos just to make Nigeria ungovernable. The implications of targeting the very strategic Lagos Third Mainland Bridge, the longest bridge in Africa, have been of major concern to authorities at all levels. The 11.8 km long bridge built by Julius Berger Nigeria Plc was commissioned in 1990. The Bridge is the longest of the three bridges connecting Lagos Island to the Mainland. The other two are the Eko and Carter bridges. The bridge, which is a vital artery of the network of federal highways, commands high patronage.

    Since the eruption of the Boko Haram insurgency in the northern parts of the country some years ago, their activities have been concentrated in the North, where several lives and property have been lost. Though there have been some cases of arrest of suspected members in some states, the southern part of the country has not experienced or witnessed any attack by the sect members.   Therefore, the recent alleged plot to attack Lagos by the terrorists has been raising serious concerns among the residents of the city and other Nigerians. This is in spite of assurances by the security agents and the state government that they were battle-ready to nip in the bud any attack by sect members.

    Since he became Governor of Lagos State, Babatunde Fashola has been engaged in proactive measures against such attacks and other crimes in the city. The government recently launched the installation of 1,200 security cameras in the city. Already, the cameras have been deployed in critical locations. Though the Lagos State government is unrelenting in the fight against crime and criminalities in the state, deploying cameras all over Lagos is not enough. Those who will man them at the control room are very vital to the success of the project. Besides, the state needs to go all out to enlighten the populace on the danger of harbouring criminals in their neighbourhoods. Again, Lagos residents must be educated about the importance of volunteering useful information on suspicious movements in their localities so as to put the terrorists in check. The security agencies too must treat such information with utmost confidentiality in order to win the confidence of the people.

    Criminals are human beings; they are not spirits. In that case, with the support and cooperation of the people, they can be stopped in their tracks. Above all, our politicians or some of them that are in the habit of keeping criminals and other hoodlums as bodyguards who are usually let loose to commit all forms of atrocities on the society should desist from such ignoble practices and allow peace to reign. In the words of Tony Blair, former British Prime Minister, following the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Centre, in New York, on September 11, 2001: “This mass terrorism is the new evil in our world today. It is perpetrated by fanatics who are utterly indifferent to the sanctity of life, and we, the democracies of this world, are going to have to come together and fight it together and eradicate this evil completely from our world.”

     

  • Boko Haram forces UNIMAID lecturers, students to sleep in classrooms, churches, mosques

    Boko Haram forces UNIMAID lecturers, students to sleep in classrooms, churches, mosques

    Like other residents of Borno State, lecturers and students of the University of Maiduguri are living possibly the most frightening part of their lives.

    The Islamist sect,Boko Haram, has turned many of them into displaced persons, forced out of their residences off campus to find just anywhere to rest their bodies, souls and minds overnight on the campus.

    Classrooms,mosques and churches are the most common safety valves for them, according to an investigation.

    Some of the lecturers and students told The Nation that they had to abandon their accommodation off campus following threats, real and imagined, from terrorists.

    Student Betty from Biu in the state told of the murder of her friend Halma Damcida, at her residence just across the road from the university.

    She has been unable to graduate after five years as a student. Betty’s experience is shared by many other students.

    Isa Mohammed, a Mass Communication student, said: ”Most of us have to brave it through the town to get to school to take lectures. We cannot even contemplate hostel life because there is nowhere to stay in the hostels.

    “Thank God, we have finished our exams. And as you can see, I have to help my mum in her restaurant so that she can pay my school fees next session. My dad used to help us with our finances, but that was until my brothers were slaughtered in cold blood with heavy power saws that were used for cutting huge trees in the village. After that, my mum ran to this place to continue from where the old man stopped.”

    The Chairman of the University of the Maiduguri branch of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), Dr Musa Abdullahi, a sociologist, wants the Federal Government to come to the rescue of the university by imposing a form of state of emergency.

    As part of other efforts to ensure the safety of the university residents, calls have been made to construct more houses to accommodate the lecturers and the non-teaching staff. This measure, according to sources, would go a long way to resolve the rising tension between the academic staff and the non-teaching staff.

    The source further disclosed that but for the maturity of the academic staff, the lack of housing for the staff would have led to serious crisis on the campus. To ensure that the fragile peace is maintained, the ASUU boss urged President Goodluck Jonathan, who is the visitor to the institution, to act and find lasting solutions before the management loses control of the situation.

    According to Abdullahi, “before the crisis, we were not complaining. But after all these killings of our colleagues, nobody wants to go and live outside the campus for now, which is why we have a jam-packed situation in this place.

    “No day passes without one complaint or the other from our colleagues who have lost the basic comfort of shelter needed to work. The dilapidated state of teaching facilities, and even the houses for teachers in the university community, is a clear indication that the last strike embarked upon by these teachers was more than justified.

    •Details on Pages 18 and 19

  • Northern governors to security agencies: Stop Boko Haram killings now

    Northern governors to security agencies: Stop Boko Haram killings now

    The Northern States Governors Forum (NSGF) yesterday challenged security agencies to put an immediate stop to the spate of killings of innocent Nigerians in the North.

    Reacting to last Thursday’s killing of 22 persons in Mavo, Wase Local Government of Plateau State, the NSGF said that the present level of insecurity in the North is unacceptable.

    The forum particularly deplored the killing of people by Boko Haram and the incessant clashes between Fulani herdsmen and farmers.

    Governor Babangida Aliyu of Niger State who doubles as the chairman of the forum lamented that the Wase incident came soon after about 30 people were killed in a similar attack in Riyom Local Government and 18 in Kaura Local Government Area of Kaduna State.

    The forum commended the Interim Administrator of Wase Local Government, Zakari Haruna and other community leaders whose quick intervention averted what would have been a crisis of huge proportion.

    He asked security agencies to ensure that the perpetrators are caught and brought to justice, to prevent a reoccurrence

    .The Governors prayed God to grant repose to the souls of the deceased and also grant members of their families the fortitude to bear the loss.

  • ‘We must  win Boko Haram war’

    ‘We must win Boko Haram war’

    President Goodluck Jonathan yesterday said the Defence and Service Chiefs have a tough time ahead unless the Boko Haram war is won.

    Decorating them with their new ranks at the Presidential Villa in Abuja, Jonathan said he did not know whether to congratulate them or not because of the circumstances of the moment.

    The military chiefs, he said, could not afford to fail in ending the Boko Haram insurgency.

    They are Chief of Defence Staff (CDS) Alex Badeh, who was decorated as Air Chief Marshal; Chief of Army Staff, Kenneth Minimah, who is now a Lt.-General, Chief of Naval Staff Usman Jibrin, now a Vice Admiral and Chief of Air Staff, Ademola Amosu, an Air Marshal.

    They were decorated after being cleared by the Senate and the House of Representatives for the first time since the return to democracy in 1999 that the National Assembly will clear the Service Chiefs before their inauguration.

    In Lagos, the Army said it was battle ready should the insurgents attempt to hit the commercial city.

    The war against terror, must be won, Jonathan said, adding:

    “Whenever I am decorating military officers I commend their wives because it is not easy to be barrack- based and for you to rise to this height. But the service chiefs, I don’t know whether I will congratulate you or I will sympathise with you because of the circumstances of the moment.”

    “That reminds me, of the article I read when I was in secondary school written by the late Dr. Tai Solarin where he said: “I wish you what I wish myself every year. May you have a hard time this year’. So I think I will wish you what I wish myself every year and may we have a hard time this period, because none of us will sleep till the Nigerians in Borno state can sleep.

    “That is why I say today is not a moment for major statements. We will be having very fine talks from time to time, but definitely Nigerians will tell you what they expect from us, we must not fail this country and I believe this team will work together to be assisted by other intelligence services because the war against terror must be won in this country.

    “I congratulate you all and your wives. I have worked with some of you in one way or the other and I am convinced that we selected the right team to salvage this country at this time. You must not disappoint Nigerians.”

    Air Chief Marshal Badeh said the military top brass would not disappoint Nigerians.

    He pledged their loyalty to Nigeria, saying the security challenges in the northeast are not insurmountable.

    The security agencies, he said, would leave no stone unturned to return normalcy to the areas as soon as possible and especially before the next year’s general elections.

    Also yesterday, former Head of State and All Progressives Congress (APC) chieftain Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, speaking on the Hausa service of the Voice of America (VOA) monitored in Kaduna yesterday, said there were allegations that soldiers collect bribe at checkpoints and raped women during operations.

    But the General Officer Commanding (GOC) of the 1 Division of the Nigerian Army, Kaduna, Maj. Gen. Garba Wahab, said what the military and other security agencies need in their fight against insurgency was support and not condemnation.

    Gen. Buhari said soldiers should return to the basics of military training by maintaining professional standards, adding “Now there are accusations that they collect bribe at checkpoints, that they rape women during operations as was the case in Borno. That was not known before. Now if you kill one of their own, they round up and wipe out the community like what happened at Baga.”

    He recalled that during late President Umaru Yar’Adua administration, a plane was sent to convey leaders of the Niger Delta militants to Abuja for talks aimed at ensuring peace in that region.

    He said: “Everybody knows that the Boko Haram leader was arrested and killed. We all know that during crisis, the police should do their work and it is only when such crisis escalates that the military comes in and they don’t round up the crisis community and kill everybody”.

    The Army yesterday spoke of a rumoured attack on military formations in Lagos by Boko Haram, saying it will repel such attack.

    Speaking at the inauguration of the 65 Battalion Alfa and Brass Company Offices in Lagos, the General Office Commanding (GOC), 81 Division, Nigerian Army, Maj.-Gen. Unahi Obi:

    “We are aware of the rumour of an attack making the rounds but there is nothing concrete as yet to substantiate it.

    “But the information available, either at a rumour or intelligence level, would not be wished away; rather we would factor it in our contingency plans.

    “We don’t arrest for the fun of it; rather, because we have concrete evidence that there is a link between the suspects and terrorism.

    “We have not made any arrests recently but if we see the need to make any arrests, we will do so,” he said.

    The project was sponsored by former Minister of Defence Lt.-Gen. Theophilus Danjuma, under the leadership of the Commanding Officer, Lt.-Col. Haruna Dasuki.

    Gen. Obi said: “In the army, when we plan for operations or even when we take our threat analysis, we assume the worst case scenario in our plans and we plan from that point of strength.

    “We come up with contingencies to deal with the worst situations and if the situation is lighter, it makes it easier for us in terms of executing it.

  • Air Force destroys Boko Haram hideouts in Borno

    The 79 Composite Group of the Nigerian Air Force in Maiduguri said on Wednesday that it had destroyed suspected Boko Haram hideouts following a raid in some parts of the state.

    The spokesman for the group, Squadron Leader Chris Erondu, said this in a statement in Maiduguri.

    Erondu, in the statement, added that the raid was carried out after surveillance in the areas.

    “Sequel to intelligence reports, the 79 Composite Group, in conjunction with 75 Strike Group, Yola, carried out air surveillance interdiction and raid on identified Boko Haram hideouts.

    “The operation was conducted in Bulabulim,Yujiwa-Alagarno, all located around Damboa axis of Borno State.

    “The results of these air operations have been remarkable as the insurgents have retreated to neighbouring countries of Cameroun, Chad and Niger Republic and have suffered heavy casualties.

    “The groups have also maintained constant security watch on Maiduguri and neighbouring communities to prevent future attack,” the News Agency of Nigeria quoted the spokesman as saying in the statement.

     

  • ‘Use force multipliers on Boko Haram’

    A security expert, Ona Ekhomu, has advised the military high command to deploy force multipliers in the fight against Boko Haram terrorists.

    He said this had become necessary as military personnel need to control the insurgency in Borno, Adamawa and Yobe states with new strategies.

    Ekhomu said attacks in Adamawa and Borno states showed that the insurgents had adaptive capacity, choosing to carry out stealth attacks in communities, villages and towns, while avoiding military patrols that tended to concentrate on the highways.

    He said security forces must utilise force multipliers to increase their effectiveness in containing the killings.

    He defined force multiplier “as a capability that when added and employed by a combat force, significantly increases the combat potential of that force and thus enhances the probability of its success against the enemy.”

    Force multiplier measures include the provision of phones and use of dedicated security hotlines for the reporting of Boko Haram attacks on rural communities.

    It is also the development of intelligence assets within the communities and the use of threat assessment software to predict Boko Haram attacks.

     

     

  • Ending inter-agency rivalry among security agencies

    Ending inter-agency rivalry among security agencies

    SIR: Finally, President Goodluck Jonathan has clarified that the reason behind the replacement of service is not connected to seeming inter-service rivalry among security agencies. The media reported his remarks while commissioning the Air Force Comprehensive School in Yola, Adamawa State. He nevertheless urged a synergy among the nation’s security agencies, given that Nigeria is exposed to “cancer” of insurgency.

    Few days before the President’s visit to Yola, suspected Boko Haram members were reported to have attacked churches and mosques and killing innocent citizens in Borno and Adamawa states. The recent attacks might have been triggered to dissuade the President from visiting the home-state of his new Chief of Defence, Air Marshal Alex Badeh who is from Adamawa.

    It should also be recalled that immediately after the announcement of the new Chief of Defence Staff, the Nigerian air-force were reported to have attacked and killed a number of suspected insurgents at the Cameroonian border with Nigeria. Badeh who was former Chief of Air Staff, had promised to crush terrorists by April 2014.

    We should not lose sight of the fact that the military has so far succeeded in restricting and cornering Boko haram insurgency to few states in the North-East. Few years ago, terrorists were having field days in other parts of the country including, Kaduna, Kano, Plateau, Kogi, Niger, Sokoto and few incursions in other states including the Federal Capital Abuja.

    The Nigerian military has recorded tremendous success in its war against insurgency. The relative peace so far recorded in the troubled states of Adamawa, Borno and Yobe before the recent unfortunate development even in worship centres, is attributed to the gallantry, determination, sacrifice and relentless struggles of the Nigerian security agencies. Even though it has continued to lose its finest personnel in several coordinated attacks against terrorists, it has remained undaunted and more committed to ending acts of terrorism across the country.

    Without doubt, we still have a long way to go in banishing terrorism from our dear land. More re-organization, strategy reviews, policy alteration, shake-up, alignments and re-alignments are part and parcel of what to expect in positioning the Nigerian military for optimum performance.

    It is the wish and prayer of all Nigerians, irrespective of tribe, religious, ethnic or political aspiration for Nigeria to overcome its security challenges as soon as possible. The human and material loses so far recorded are too massive to be quiet about. We cannot continue to act as though those precious lives we keep losing in separate attacks are not precious to us. We have every reason to be worried about this sad occurrence. Every soul lost in any of these attacks should be a source of concern to any Nigerian. All the government requires of us is full time cooperation and understanding as it goes about making necessary changes in the nation’s security make-up to overcome challenges posed by insurgent groups.

    We all desire to see that peace and normalcy returns to all trouble spots across the country.

    The successes so far recorded in the war against insurgency must be sustained. We need not allow unnecessary primordial and clannish issues distract us from consolidating on the gains so far recorded. Even members of the international community are happy with Nigeria’s modest achievements in its efforts to end terrorism in the country. As Nigerian too, we should cooperate with the security agencies in providing necessary supports and information for the protection of lives and property.

    The new heads of these security establishments should seek to breakdown the wall of mutual suspicions and inter-agency rivalry among their chiefs and their personnel. They should make effort to share intelligence. They should all realize that they have common goal of ensuring that Nigeria is safe for both Nigerians and her visitors. The government should not tolerate any unnecessary competition that will bring retrogression to this country. They should work collectively in harmony to ensure that the nation overcomes her security challenges.

    • Fatima Goni

    Kofar Dukawuya, Kano

     

  • Boko Haram goes to university

    What an interesting development, the proposal by the Vice-Chancellor, University of Ibadan (UI), Prof Isaac Adewole, for partnership with the Nigerian Army in the counter-terrorism campaign against Boko Haram! Don’t forget that the name of the dreaded Islamist group mirrors antagonism to Western education and way of life. So when a centre for the very type of learning that the group is opposed to offers assistance in the battle, it appears to be a fitting move for self-preservation, which is said to be the first law of Nature.

    Prof Adewole, during a visit to Maj-Gen Ahmed Jibrin, the general officer commanding (GOC) 2 Division, at Ojoo, Ibadan, Oyo State, said: “The Chief of Defence Staff said the insurgency will end in April. I do not have the facts and information that he has. But I believe that winning the war involves winning the heart and soul of the people. The university can partner the military to find out what are the real reasons for the insurgency.”

    He added that the suggested collaboration between the Army and the university’s Department of Strategic Studies would also serve the purpose of “re-teething and retooling “the military’s personnel.

    The motive and objective may be appealing. However, perhaps unsurprisingly, given the professor’s academic background, the gesture was rather over-intellectual. Reminder: Boko Haram has been on the rampage since 2009, and at various times its spokesmen have projected its “guiding principles,” if such a positive-sounding phrase may be used in describing the group’s destructive philosophy.

    In other words, the group’s grounds for violence have not only been well publicised; they are also well-known. Driven by a theocratic agenda, perhaps fuelled by unacceptable socio-economic conditions, Boko Haram, the truth must be told, does not require any elaborate study to deconstruct it. The anti-terror effort should not be complicated with impractical over-analysis.

    It is noteworthy that Prof Adewole mentioned the comment by the new Chief of Defence Staff (CDS), Air Marshal Alex Badeh, on crushing the terrorists by April, the terminal date of the six-month extension of emergency rule in Adamawa, Borno and Yobe states in November last year, following an initial period from May to October. Also worth mentioning is the fact that, in a demonstration of apparent contempt for Badeh’s time-table, Boko Haram carried out devastating attacks in Adamawa and Borno, which claimed at least 138 lives.

    This context clearly calls for urgent action, certainly not the type proposed by Prof. Adewole. Even considering that the Army buys the Vice-Chancellor’s idea, there is no doubt that the advocated strategic research would likely be time-consuming, which is a luxury the country can ill afford in the face of the group’s relentless and remorseless rebellion.

    While such study might be of intellectual value, it is highly improbable that it could be decisive in winning the terror war. It could be endorsed for academic reasons, but it would be over-optimistic, if not unrealistic, to imagine that it can yield the kind of concrete result needed at this time.

     

  • Nigeria’s leadership headache

    Nigeria’s leadership headache

    SIR: Is President Goodluck Jonathan aware of the enormity of our national problems? Has he lived up to our expectations, and performed his duties to the best of his abilities?

    Our President hasn’t shown the political will to tackle our multifarious national problems. He seems to be overwhelmed by them. And, based on any indices for assessing national leaders, he has scored an abysmal low mark.

    Nothing works in our country. The privatization of PHCN hasn’t translated to our enjoying uninterrupted power supply in Nigeria. The noise from generators assails our ears every night. And, our rutted roads are death-traps on which people die daily. Good road network and regular supply of electricity are incentives and forces for the rapid industrialization of any country.

    Nigeria has failed almost on all fronts, ranging from insecurity of lives and property characterized by kidnapping, armed robbery and Boko Haram insurgency, to the issue of corruption, which is the cancer asphyxiating Nigeria. like Emperor Nero, our leaders are fiddling around while Nigeria is burning. The twin evils of corruption and insecurity of lives and property are creating anarchic situation in Nigeria.

    Sadly, the national issues troubling us are subsumed under President Jonathan subterranean politicking for retention of power beyond 2015.

    • Chiedu Uche Okoye

    Uruowulu – Obosi, Anambra State

     

     

  • Gunmen kill 11 in fresh Adamawa attack

    Gunmen kill 11 in fresh Adamawa attack

    Gunmen believed to be Boko Haram militants have killed 11 people, including a pastor at Sabon Garin Yamdula, Madagali local government area of Adamawa State.

    The Friday night insurgency is the latest in the long list of attacks in the Northeast, where soldiers are currently locked in a battle with the terrorists.

    Madagali local government area is close to the boundary with Borno, the sect’s principal stronghold.

    Chairman of Madagali council, Maina Ularamu, said of the Friday attack: “Yes, some gunmen we believed are the same fighters of Boko Haram unleashed a new round of violence on Sabon Gari Yamdula on Friday night and killed – as at the moment – 11 people.”

    He said the militants tried to burn down the entire village but “were repelled by the youths of the area who came out with locally made guns.”

    Vigilante youths firing guns set them to flight and soldiers were later deployed.

    Ularamu said that the pastor was rushed to the hospital but died.

    “It was while repelling them that the security agents later arrived before the terrorists retreated.”

    The Sabon Gari attack came days after gunmen suspected to Boko Haram insurgents killed over 50 people in an attack on a church in the Chakawa village of Adamawa.

    In a separate attack, police reported that a bus Friday set off an improved explosive device on the highway through nearby Kuthra village in Borno State, killing seven passengers.