Tag: boko haram

  • Arraignment of 17 Boko Haram suspects stalled

    Arraignment of 17 Boko Haram suspects stalled

    The arraignment of 17 suspected members of the Boko Haram sect was stalled yesterday at the Federal High Court, Lagos, because five of them had no lawyers to represent them, a court official who did not want to be named, said.

    It was learnt that the presiding judge, Justice Musa Kurya, adjourned the matter to enable the five get legal representation.

    The suspects were charged with eight counts of belonging to the proscribed organisation and for being in possession of explosives and dangerous weapons.

    The accused include: Ali Modu, Adamu Karumi, Ibrahim Ali, Ibrahim Bukar, Mohammed A. Mohammed, Bala Haruna and Idris Ali.

    The rest are: Mohammed Murtala, Kadri Mohammed, Mustapha Hassan, Abba Duguni, Sanni Adamu, Danjuma Yahaya, Musa Bala, Bala Daura, Faruk Haruna, Abdulaziz Zuladaini.

    The charge stated that the suspects were arrested at three locations in Lagos on March 21, namely Plot 5, Road 69, Lekki Phase 1 Housing Estate; 24 Oyegbemi Street, Ijora Oloye, Apapa and at an unnumbered bungalow on Oyegbemi Street, behind Celestial Church, Ijora Oloye.

    The government said they conspired among themselves “to commit felony, to wit acts of terrorism” by having in their possession explosive substances, including three packets of explosive construction pipes and 15 detonators.

    They were also allegedly in possession of 11 AK-47 riffle magazines loaded with 30 rounds of live ammunition each; 200 rounds of 7.62 mm live ammunition, one AK-47 rifle, two AK-47 rifle magazines with three rounds of live ammunition each, two suit cases containing explosives and one water container of explosives.

    Also recovered from the suspects, the charge said, were one bag containing canisters, one HP laptop, five Nokia handsets and one red Volkswagen Golf car with registration number Lagos: SMK 427 AZ, allegedly meant to transport the explosives.

    The alleged offence is contrary to Section 17 of the Terrorism (Prevention) Act 2013 and punishable under Section 17 (b) of the same Act.

    In another count, it was stated that Ibrahim Bukar and Kadri Mohammed, on the same day, “knowingly entered into an arrangement as a result of which money is to be made available for the purpose of terrorism for a proscribed organisation to wit: Boko Haram sect.”

    The government said the alleged offence is contrary to Section 13 (2) of the Terrorism Prevention Amendment Act 2013 and punishable under same Act.

    According to the fifth count, the accused were arrested by a team of security agents for being members of a proscribed organisation, the Boko Haram sect, said to be contrary to Section 2 of the Terrorism (Prevention) (Proscription Order) Notice 2013 and punishable under the same 2 (3) (1) read in conjunction with Section 33 (1) (b) of the Act as amended.

    The accused also allegedly had in their possession prohibited firearms without a licence, contrary to Section 516 of the Criminal Code, Cap C38, Laws of the Federation of Nigeria 2004 and punishable under the same section.

    Journalists were barred from covering proceedings.

    As proceedings were to begin, an SSS official asked everyone who was not a lawyer to leave the courtroom.

    The suspects were brought to the court at about 9.45am by a combined team of riot policemen and Department of State Security Services (DSS) officials who were armed with sophisticated weapons.

  • US, UK condemn terrorism, impunity in Nigeria

    US, UK condemn terrorism, impunity in Nigeria

    The United States and United Kingdom on Tuesday condemned  the Boko Haram insurgency in some parts of country, the extra-judicial killings and acts of impunity of security forces.
    They urged the Federal Government at the ongoing United Nations Human Rights Council Universal Periodic Review (UPR) session in Geneva to ensure perpetrators are made to face the wrath of the law, while advising that more proactive ways be explored in resolving security situation and promoting accountability for gross violation of human rights. 
    They also  called for credible and independent investigations into reports on human rights abuses by security members, particularly on detainees during counter terrorism operations.
    US said: “We condemn Boko Haram’s horrific attacks on Nigerians, including members of the public and their government. We are also concerned by the reports of Nigerian security forces perpetrating serious human rights violations in their counter-insurgency efforts, particularly against detained in state custody, and we urge Nigeria to respect human rights in any security response.
    “Hold security forces accountable for human rights violations, and establish a system for human rights violations, and establish a system for human rights monitoring to promote accountability for gross violations of human rights.”
    While defending Nigeria’s human rights record at the UPR session the Minister of Justice and Attorney General of the Federation, Mr Mohammed Adoke, SAN, said Nigeria has put in place measures to improve the security situation.
    According to him, terrorism and violent insurgency such the Boko Haram’s are externally-induced internal adding that  the Nigerian Government has kept open communication channels through the activities of a Presidential Committee on Security Challenges towards working out a peaceful resolution of the crisis.
    In spite of the difficult circumstances that terrorism generates, the Minister said  law enforcement agencies have been instructed to observe human rights while countering acts of terror.
    He said other measures have been taken  to improve security, including enactment of the Terrorism Prevention Act 2011 and its subsequent amendment in 2013 to broaden the scope of its application; development of a Counter Terrorism Strategy and creation of crisis management centre in the office of the National Security Adviser; coordination of enhanced capacity building for all security and intelligence outfits at both the strategic and tactical levels; the National Security Adviser coordinates efforts among the security and intelligence agencies to ensure protection of the human rights of all persons in counter terrorism operations.
    “Let me state here that torture, as a means of extracting information from suspects, has no place in Nigerian law enforcement. In addressing the problem, the government has adopted constitutional measures which include the “declaration of a state of emergency” in the states of Adamawa, Borno and Yobe of the Northeast Nigeria, where the insurgents have their base.
    ” The Joint Task Force and the Special Task Force have been deployed with the required legislative authorisation to utilise rights-based “Rules of Engagement” and “Operational Plans” in combating the insurgency.
    “Government has already proscribed Boko Haram as well as the Jamāʿatu Anṣāril Muslimīna fī Bilādis Sūdān and stipulated a 20-year jail term for anybody who aids or sponsors them in any manner whatsoever. The Government has also put in place an amnesty programme to dissuade terrorists and other extremists from violence, ” the minister stated.
  • Military kills 37 Boko Haram suspects in Borno

    Military kills 37 Boko Haram suspects in Borno

    Men of the 7 Division of the Nigerian Army have said they killed 37 suspected Boko Haram insurgents at one of their camps at Alagarno villages in Borno State.

    The soldiers said several others were injured in the attack. Various arms and ammunition were reportedly recovered.

    Three Hilux vehicles and motorcycles belonging to the suspects were destroyed.

    The operation, which lasted three hours, was said to have been carried out by ground and air coordinated attacks on the insurgents’ camp.

    A statement in Maiduguri, the state capital, by the spokesman of the division, Capt Aliyu Danja, confirmed the killing.

    The statement said: “Based on available intelligence report, troops of the 7 Division of the Nigerian Army launched an attack on terrorists’ camp in Alagarno. The operation, which began on Monday, October 21, involved a coordinated ground and air assaults by our troops, in conjunction with the 79 Composite Group of the Nigerian Air Force in Maiduguri. They destroyed the terrorists’ camp.

    “Thirty-seven terrorists were killed in the fight while several others fled with gunshot wounds.”

    The statement also confirmed Boko Haram attacks on motorists and passengers last Sunday at Logomari villages of Gamboru-Ngala- Dikwa Local Government Areas.

    It, however, dismissed the report that 20 people were killed, instead of four civilians and two injured persons.

    “In the early hours of Sunday, October 20, about 50 Boko Haram terrorists, armed with AK47 rifles and rocket-propelled launchers, blocked a road at Gamboru-Ngala- Dikwa in Logomari village. They killed four civilians and injured two persons.”

    Danja added that the insurgents set ablaze four civilian trucks loaded with provisions and attacked members of the vigilance group, called Civilian JTF who were returning from a funeral.

    According to him, three members of the vigilantes were killed and their vehicles set ablaze.

    The statement said: “Vigilante youths, who escaped, however, reinforced, pursued the insurgents and destroyed their hideout. They killed several insurgents, while others escaped.

    “Troops of the 7 Division are currently conducting aggressive patrols within the area to trace and destroy Boko Haram elements within its area of responsibility.”

     

  • Four Boko Haram suspects arraigned  over ‘plot’ to attack Kirikiri Prison

    Four Boko Haram suspects arraigned over ‘plot’ to attack Kirikiri Prison

    The Federal Government yesterday arraigned four persons at the Federal High Court, Lagos for allegedly belonging to the proscribed Boko Haram sect.

    The accused persons are: Adamu Mohammed, Mohammed Mustapha, Bura Hassaini and Mohammed Ibrahim.

    The first and second defendants allegedly plotted to attack the Kirikiri Maximum Prison to free their members held in custody.

    Security was tight at the court yesterday as armed State Security Services (SSS) officers mounted guard around the premises.

    The charge, numbered FHC/L/316c/13, was signed by E. K. Ugwu, on behalf of the Attorney-General of the Federation.

    In the first count, the government said the four, sometime in June/July at Wasein, a hideout at Orile-Iganmu area, Apapa, Lagos, and at 3, Denton Street, Yaba, within the court’s jurisdiction, were arrested by a team of security agents “for belonging to a proscribed organisation to wit: Boko Haram sect.”

    The prosecution said the accused persons committed an offence contrary to Section 2 of the Terrorism (Prevention) Act 2011 and punishable under Section 2 (3) (i), read in conjunction with Section 33 (1) (b) of the Act as amended by the Terrorism (Prevention) (Proscription Order) 2013.

    In the second count, the government alleged that Mohammed and Mustapha, with others at large, on or about June 26 at Wasein, conspired “to commit a felony to wit: act of terrorism by organising a planned attack of the Kirikiri Prison in Lagos State to free your detained members in prison custody.”

    The alleged offence, the government said, is contrary to Section 8 (1) of the Terrorism (Prevention) (Amendment) Act 2013 and punishable under Section 8 (1) of the same Act.

    The prosecution also alleged that Hassaini in 2012/2013 at Bama, Borno State, within the Federal High Court jurisdiction, “did commit a felony to wit: acts of terrorism, in that you assisted or facilitated the activities of a proscribed organisation to wit: Boko Haram sect members by monitoring the activities of the security agents and reported your findings on phone to the leadership of the Boko Haram sect headed by one Yamodu in the area, so as to evade arrest and investigation.”

    Following Ugwu’s oral application, the charge was read in English and explained to the accused persons in Hausa language.

    The court, presided over by Justice Saliu Saidu, asked each of them: “Do you understand the charge read to you?”

    Theys all responded in the affirmative, but pleaded not guilty.

    “I am not guilty,” each of them said.

    Ugwu said: “In view of the plea of the accused persons, we pray for a date for trial, while the accused persons be remanded in prison custody.”

    Justice Saidu ordered that the accused persons be remanded in prison custody and adjourned the trial till December 12.

  • Four arraigned over plot to bomb Kirikiri

    The Federal Government on Tuesday arraigned four persons at the Federal High Court, Lagos for allegedly belonging to the proscribed Boko Haram sect.

    It said the first and second defendants allegedly plotted to attack the Kirikiri Maximum Prison to free their members held in custody.

    The accused persons are – Adamu Mohammed, Mohammed Mustapha, Bura Hassaini and Mohammed Ibrahim.

    Security was tight at the court as armed State Security Services (SSS) personnel mounted guard around the premises.

    Officers manned the court’s two gates, screening people as they went in.

    Those carrying bags were asked to open them for examination.

    They suspects were brought in hooded.

    The charge, numbered FHC/L/316c/13 was signed by E. K. Ugwu, on behalf of the Attorney-General of the Federation.

    In the first count, the government said the four, sometime in June and July at Wasein, a hideout at Orile-Iganmu area, Apapa, Lagos, and at 3 Denton Street, Yaba, within the court’s jurisdiction, were arrested by a team of security agents “for belonging to a proscribed organisation to wit: Boko Haram sect.”

    The prosecution said the accused persons thereby committed an offence contrary to Section 2 of the Terrorism (Prevention) Act 2011 and punishable under Section 2 (3) (i), read in conjunction with Section 33 (1) (b) of the Act as amended by the Terrorism (Prevention) (Proscription Order) 2013.

    In the second count, the government alleged that Mohammed and Mustapha, with others at large, on or about June 26 this year at Wasein, conspired among themselves “to commit a felony to wit: act of terrorism by organising a planned attack of the Kirikiri Prison in Lagos State to free detained members in prison custody.”

    The alleged offence, the government said, is contrary to Section 8 (1) of the Terrorism (Prevention) (Amendment) Act 2013 and punishable under Section 8 (1) of the same Act.

    Following Ugwu’s oral application, the charge was read in English and explained to the accused persons in Hausa language.

    The court, presided over by Justice Saliu Saidu, asked each of them: “Do you understand the charge read to you?”

    The accused persons all responded in the affirmative and pleaded not guilty.

     

  • Boko Haram kills 10 in Borno villages

    Boko Haram kills 10 in Borno villages

    For the second time in two days, gunmen suspected to be members of the Boko Haram sect have invaded villages of Kawuri District and Fori of Konduga Local Government Area of Borno State. They killed 10 people, including three members of the civilian JTF.

    Twenty four hours earlier, gunmen attacked border communities of Logomani villages between Dikwa – Gamboru Ngala and Cameroon Republic, killing over 20 civilians including motorists.

    Kawuri District is one of the biggest in Konduga council area, along the Maiduguri-Obama Highway which is about 60 kilometres from Maiduguri the state capital.

    A woman passenger Madam Hauwa Musa said: “Yes, I was among the passengers that boarded a taxi from Mubi to Maiduguri, and when we reached the villages along the main road, we saw some buildings being set on fire as members of the Civillian JTF were fleeing into buses.”

    The gunmen also set ablaze some residential houses and public buildings including a clinic and a primary school.

    It was gathered that the gunmen numbering about 30 and using two Hilux vehicles and motorcycles with arms and ammunition, Rocket Propel Launchers including Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs), stormed the village at about 3 am and started ordering residents to come out of their houses before opening fire on them.

    They also later threw explosives on some private and public structures.

    Acting spokesman of the 7 Division, Nigerian Army in Maiduguri, Captain Aliyu Danja and Police spokesman Gideon Jubrin, could not be reached as at press time.

  • How Civilian  JTF drove Boko Haram into bush

    How Civilian JTF drove Boko Haram into bush

    Though the Boko Haram insurgents are still on the prowl, vigilantes have been able to clip their wings to a reasonable extent, reports
    New York Times

    The men from Boko Haram came tearing through this rural town, setting fire to houses, looting, shooting and yelling, “God is great!” residents and officials said. The gunmen shot motorists point-blank on the road, dragged young men out of homes for execution and ordered citizens to lie down for a fatal bullet.

    When it was all over 12 hours later, they said, about 150 people were dead, and even one month later, this once-thriving town of 35,000 is a burned out, empty shell of blackened houses and charred vehicles.

    Boko Haram, Nigeria’s homegrown Islamist insurgent movement, remains a deadly threat in the countryside, a militant group eager to prove its jihadi bona fides and increasingly populated by fighters from Mali, Mauritania and Algeria, said the governor of Borno State, Kashim Shettima.

    But about 40 miles away in Maiduguri, the sprawling state capital from where the militant group emerged, Boko Haram has been largely defeated for now, according to officials, activists and residents — a remarkable turnaround that has brought thousands of people back to the streets. The city of two million, until recently emptied of thousands of terrified inhabitants, is bustling again after four years of fear.

    For several months, there have been no shootings or bombings in Maiduguri, and the sense of relief — with women lingering at market stalls on the sandy streets and men chatting under the shade of feathery green neem trees in the 95-degree heat — is palpable.

    Boko Haram has been pushed out of Maiduguri largely because of the efforts of a network of youthful informer-vigilantes fed up with the routine violence and ideology of the insurgents they grew up with.

    “I’m looking at these people: they collect your money, they kill you — Muslims, Christians,” said the network’s founder, Baba Lawal Ja’faar, a car and sheep salesman by trade. “The Boko Haram are saying, ‘Don’t go to the school; don’t go to the hospital.’ It’s all rubbish.”

    Governor Shettima has recruited the vigilantes for “training” and is paying them $100 a month. In the sandy Fezzan neighborhood of low cinder block houses, where the informer group was nurtured over the past two years, the walls are pockmarked with bullet holes from shootouts with the Islamists, a visible sign of the motivations for fighting the insurgents.

    “The suffering of our people was just too much,” said the group’s third-in-command, Mr. Ja’faar’s younger brother Kalli, standing on a street corner in Fezzan as others nodded.

    The elder Mr. Ja’faar moves around discreetly, as people are afraid to be seen with him.

    “People will run away from me because I am catching the Boko Haram,” the elder Mr. Ja’faar, 32, said, smiling during a nighttime interview indoors. But he seemed unafraid of the danger, lifting his bright yellow polo shirt to reveal a thin leather strip around his waist, which bore an amulet. He explained that he carried “plenty of magic,” 30 charms, to protect himself.

    The network’s intimate knowledge of the community enables it to quickly recognize Boko Haram members and turn them over to the Nigerian military; dozens have been turned over, members of the informer group said.

    The military, known as the Joint Task Force, or J.T.F., has been unable to defeat the Boko Haram on its own despite four years of a bloody counterinsurgency campaign that has been widely criticized for the indiscriminate detention and killing of civilians.

    By contrast, the vigilante group’s leaders say, some of their recruits are repentant former Boko Haram members, making it easier to correctly identify and catch the insurgents. The vigilante group now calls itself the “Civilian J.T.F.”

    For years, analysts have urged Nigerian officers not to conduct deadly crackdowns and wide arrests, but instead to recruit civilians in the destitute northern neighborhoods where Boko Haram has gained ground. That outcome appears now to have occurred spontaneously, urged on by the governor, according to interviews here.

    Mr. Ja’faar calmly boasted, “I catch more than 900 people,” a number that could not be confirmed independently. But the army’s own large-scale roundups and killings of young men have tailed off recently, officials and activists in Maiduguri said.

    The evolving strategy of utilizing the Civilian J.T.F. echoes the tactic that quelled the long-running insurgency in southern Nigeria, where rebels preyed on oil installations for years, shaking the Nigerian government, before they were bought off by the federal authorities in 2010.

    “The Civilian J.T.F. has driven Boko Haram into the bush,” said Maikaramba Saddiq of the Civil Liberties Organisation in Maiduguri, a frequent critic of the military.

    Indeed, some activists wonder whether the military is more committed to preserving, not ending, the conflict with Boko Haram in order to perpetuate the government spending that comes with it. In a point gingerly acknowledged by some officials, the country’s security services have grown accustomed to a $6 billion-plus national security budget, one-quarter of the government’s total budget, and have shown a surprising lack of alacrity in responding to some recent atrocities.

    The killings inside and outside Benisheik, for example, inexplicably went on unimpeded for more than 10 hours before the army arrived, these activists say. Most of those killed were travelers waylaid by gunmen on the now-deserted and dangerous main highway from Maiduguri, bound hand and foot, and then shot in the head. The road is still littered with charred vehicles.

    A senior official in Maiduguri said the army could now crush Boko Haram “in three weeks,” as the insurgents had been “cornered in one axis of the state.” Insisting that he not be identified for fear of retribution, he expressed puzzlement that the army had not yet eradicated Boko Haram, acknowledging that “at the top echelons they might be making money out of the insurgency.”

    Before the Benisheik attack, the Islamists had been gathering for several days, and military officials were aware of it, asserted Mohammed Benisheikh, a lawyer whose brother was shot in the leg in the violence. He said that his family, one of the town’s most prominent, lost numerous vehicles and that its property had been burned in the attack.

    The Nigerian Army declined to make its commanding officer in the Maiduguri sector available for an interview, and senior officers in the capital, Abuja, did not respond to phone calls or text messages.

    For their part, the Civilian J.T.F. members said they were not in it for the money, but to protect their communities. On the city’s streets, ragged youths wielding machetes, sticks, garden implements and cutlasses can be seen checking traffic.

    “There’s no going back,” said Mousbaf Adamu, 23, who sells ice at a roundabout near Government House in Maiduguri and was carrying a long, rough stick. “I’m ready to sacrifice my life for my people to be protected.”

    The real work of the vigilante group occurs out of sight, in the identification of Boko Haram members that often occurs door to door.

    “We know them by just looking at them,” said Hamisu Adamu, 40, who sells leather bag and is in charge of “discipline” for the group.

    “Some of them may be our brothers, and we hand them to the military,” he said. So many, he claimed, that there are few Boko Haram members left in the city. “Inside of Maiduguri, it would be very difficult” for the insurgents to circulate, he said.

    The governor, Mr. Shettima, agreed.

    “The Civilian J.T.F. are a real game-changer,” Mr. Shettima said as he toured road construction projects in the sweltering low-rise city, cheered on from the roadside by groups of the young men to whom he handed out cash. “Now the Boko Haram are seeing the civilian population as their greatest enemy. These are local people who truly know who the Boko Haram are.”

    In fact, some residents said the Benisheik attack of Sept. 17 was retaliation over an earlier confrontation between the Boko Haram and the Civilian J.T.F. in which eight insurgents were killed. Armed with weapons from the looted arsenals of Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi in Libya, like militant groups in Mali, the young Islamists went door to door that evening, looking for prey, the governor said.

    “They said I should have to come lie down in front of them,” said Alhadji Jiji Abdallah, the brother of Mr. Benisheikh, the lawyer. “This is their system of killing.” But he refused, and ran. In the darkness, they shot him at close range, hitting him in the leg. They thought he was dead, he said.

    “They don’t have any reason at all” for attacking us, he said from his hospital bed.

    Boko Haram’s efforts in rural Nigeria are not likely to be finished, the Civilian J.T.F. notwithstanding. Twelve days after the Benisheik attack, gunmen killed more than 40 students at an agricultural college nearby, officials say. Once again, the gunmen went about unimpeded by the military, even though the region is under a state of emergency and secular state schools have been targeted by the Islamists many times before, angry residents said. Officials expect the group to strike again. “The only way they can gain respect in the international circle of jihadism is by unleashing such mayhem,” Mr. Shettima said.

    On Sunday, Boko Haram militants killed 19 people, mostly traders, near the town of Gamboru Ngala on the border with Cameroon, according to residents and survivors. The gunmen, wearing military uniforms, set up a barricade early in the morning on the highway, about 60 miles Maiduguri. They forced people out of their vehicles and shot them at close range or slit their throats.

     

  • Boko Haram has nothing to do with religion, ethnicity- Jonathan

    Boko Haram has nothing to do with religion, ethnicity- Jonathan

    President Goodluck Jonathan has said the the terrorist killings in the country has no religious or ethnic link.

    He spoke at the Presidential Villa while receiving the Vice President, Namadi Sambo, who led the Muslim community to pay Sallah homage on him after the Eid-El-Kabir morning prayers.

    According to him, the killings is because the world is generally experiencing terrorism.

    “That is why I asked those who killed those 50 students did they even bother about their religion or ethnicity? It has nothing to do with religion, it has nothing to do with ethnicity,” he said

    He however said there was need for Nigerians to  “talk to ourselves in  the way that our children will not develop hate amongst themselves.”

    “At times, when you listen to radio and read in the papers and you see  sometimes even our elders that are supposed to give us leadership quarreling over nothing, sometimes even insulting themselves and even making provocative statements that will sometimes instigate one group against the other.

    ” We decided that we cannot continue that way, the talking must have a direction. What has been happening on the pages of the newspapers are discussions that have no direction.”

    “We want a country that will have a direction so  the discussions must have a direction, the discussion must lead Nigeria to where we want to be, not a divided Nigeria, not a Nigeria that is sown on hate, not a Nigeria that will be based on acrimony, ethnicity and tribal sentiments in the way we conduct ourselves.”

    “That is a reason we set up that committee and we have given them the free will. Some people are still instigating others that the president is doing this, the government does not have the capacity to do that. We are totally committed to do what is right.”

    He thanked the muslim community and other visitors for finding time to pay homage.

    He said: “Some of you have been consistent. We thank God that inspite of the challenges we are celebrating.”

    “We have challenges but I’m glad that Allah made it possible for us to be here today. Other countries have had their own challenges, 53 years is a long period for an adult but as a nation we are very young.”

    Speaking earlier, Vice President Sambo congratulated the President’s successful outing at the recent United Nations General Assembly in the United States, Nigeria’s 53rd Independent anniversary and Super Eagle’s victory over Ethiopia in the first leg world cup qualifier.

    He also commended the efforts of the President towards ensuring political stability in the country.

    According to him, the National Conference initiated by the President was also commendable as it would promote peace and the unity of the country.

    Sambo and the Minister of State for the FCT, Olajumoke Akinjide later presented Sallah card to the President.

    At the occasion  were  Chief of Defence Staff, Admiral Ola Sa’ad Ibrahim; former PDP National Chairman, Ahmadu Ali; Inspector General of Police, Mohammed Abubakar and National Security Adviser (NSA), Sambo Dasuki rtd and John Cardinal Onayeikan.

  • Oyo gives N28m to Boko Haram victims’ families

    Oyo gives N28m to Boko Haram victims’ families

    The Oyo State government yesterday gave N28 million to the families of the Bodija traders that were killed by suspected Boko Haram members in Maiduguri, Borno State.

    Governor Abiola Ajimobi distributed the cheques to the families of the slain traders at the Bodija Market.

    Representatives of the 14 families, mainly the widows of the deceased and the aged mother of one of them, were given N2 million each.

    Ajimobi said: “We cannot pay for people’s lives, but we can cushion the effects of their departure by helping their families.”

    He described the killing of the traders as “gruesome”, urging the bereaved to take it as an act of God.

    One of the widows, Mrs. Folasade Afolabi, who spoke for the others, thanked the governor for his help.

    The Chairman of the Ibadan Foodstuff Sellers Association, Alhaji Olalekan Azeez, urged the Federal Government to tighten security in the North.

     

  • Boko Haram: Committee ready to submit report

    The Presidential Committee on Peace and Resolution of Conflict in the Northeast will submit its report to the President anytime from next week.
    The Chairman of the committee and Special Duties Minister, Kabiru Taminu, stated this on Tuesday while briefing the leadership of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) on the activities of his ministry.
    Tanimu said the committee had completed 99 percent of its assignment, assuring that the remaining one percent would be concluded this week, after which a report would be submitted to President Goodluck Jonathan.
    The minister however could not answer a reporter’s question on the whereabouts of the leader of the Boko Haram sect, Abubakar Shekau.
    He said: “I think I should also ask you where is Shekau. Now with all sense of responsibility, we have been directed by Mr. President to identify key members of the sect and engage them in dialogue.
    “Mr. President did not ask us to look for Shekau and engage him in dialogue. And it is important for Nigerians to appreciate that in matters of this nature, you don’t just wake up one day even as a dialogue committee established by government and say you are discussing with the highest leadership of the insurgents.
    “Usually what happened is that we have been able to establish confidence because it is necessary. Initially, they deployed lower rank of their membership to us, like water testing mechanism.
    “They go back without any molestation. Then at the next meeting, they would deploy a higher set of members. And this is how it has been going to the level where we now. We have started to engage key members of the insurgents.
    “But for us, it does not have to be Shekau. The committee cannot determine for them who should represent them. As far as we know, these are genuine members of the organisation. We deal with them and we have several ways of determining whether they are genuine members or not.
    “In the course of this assignment, we have seen some people who are fake members of the insurgency groups that came for the purpose of getting money.
    “But I want to assure that we have been talking to genuine members of the insurgency and these are members that are key as far as peaceful resolution of this matter is concerned.”
    Tanimu said the committee had laid solid foundation for sustainable peace in the country.