Tag: boko haram

  • Abuja -based lawyer, son quizzed  over alleged link with Boko Haram

    Abuja -based lawyer, son quizzed over alleged link with Boko Haram

    An Abuja-based lawyer and his son have been quizzed by security agents in Maiduguri in connection with alleged link with the Islamist sect, Boko Haram.

    The popular lawyer was originally based in the Borno State capital until the insurgency launched by the sect and the subsequent military operations to restore order forced him to relocate to the Federal Capital.

    The lawyer and his son were said to have been arrested after a suspected Boko Haram member in security custody mentioned the son’s name as an accomplice.

    The Boko Haram suspect, sources said, had confessed to the killing of people in the name of the sect.

    The suspect claimed to have given money, clothes and a gun after operations to the lawyer’s son for safe keeping.

    Members of the Borno Vigilance group, otherwise known as ‘Civilian JTF,’ effected the arrest of the first suspect and after interrogating him stormed the lawyer’s residence to pick up his son.

    The boy who was the sole occupant of the house, on sighting the vigilance group members, escaped and went to Abuja to inform his father about the situation.

    It was gathered that the lawyer’s friends and neighbours who got wind of the development advised him to turn in his son to the authorities.

    He accepted the suggestion and went to Maiduguri with his son.

    Unknown to father and son, the vigilance members were on their trail from the airport and shortly before arriving in their residence, were intercepted by the vigilance members who beat them before handing them over to the Joint Task Force (JTF).

    The JTF spokesman, Lt. Col. Sagir Musa, could not be reached for comments on the matter but a top security official who does not want his name in print confirmed the arrest.

    He said: “If, after our investigations, anyone of them is found to be truly involved in Boko Haram activities, rest assured that the full wrath of the law shall be visited on him.”

  • Boko Haram: DHQ raises 18-man panel to screen suspects

    The Defence Headquarters yesterday raised an 18-man panel to screen and categorise all persons arrested in connection with terrorism.

    The establishment of the panel is aimed at ending prolonged detention of some suspects arrested for Boko Haram insurgency in Adamawa, Borno and Yobe states.

    It was also gathered that the inauguration of the panel might be in response to some international organizations like the Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International that innocent suspects were being kept in custody in the three states where there is a state of emergency.

    A statement last night by the Director of Defence Information, Brig.-Gen. Chris Olukolade, last night, however, said the panel was part of steps to protect the legal rights of those in detention for suspected terrorist activities.

    The statement said: “The Defence Headquarters (DHQ) today (yesterday) inaugurated an 18-member Committee to screen and categorise persons apprehended in connection with terrorism in the ongoing security operations in parts of the country.

    “This is in furtherance of measures to observe the legal rights of persons involved.

    “Inaugurating the committee at the Defence Headquarters, the Chief of Defence Staff, Admiral Ola Sa’ad Ibrahim, who was represented by the Chief of Training and Operations, Major General Lawrence Ngubane, charged the team to see their assignment as a national call to duty and therefore ensure they bring their wealth of experience to bear on the outcome.

    “He said the work of the team is very important to the nation, hence their selection to work in the committee.

    “The team which will classify the detainees comprises experienced legal officers from security agencies as well as Ministries of Justice and offices of Attorney-General of the Federation and the affected states of Yobe, Adamawa and Borno.

    “They are to submit a report to the CDS within one month, making appropriate recommendations with regards to prosecution, further investigation, deportation and/or unconditional release of the detainees.”

  • Gunmen kill policeman, girl in Bauchi

     

     

    A girl and a policeman were killed during a fresh attack in Bauchi on Monday, a development the army blamed on the Boko Haram sect.

    The attack at the home of a Muslim cleric in Darazo, Bauchi State, was the first attributed to the group since the start of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

    “The gunmen came on motorcycles and headed straight to the home of the cleric and opened fire indiscriminately, killing a girl and a policeman living in the area,” local resident Baffale Sanusi told AFP on telephone.

    A military source confirmed the deaths and said two more people were wounded in the attack which took place at the time of Muslim evening prayers.

    “We have received reports of shootings in Darazo this evening and we have mobilised troops from nearby military formation to the town to deal with the situation,” a senior military source in Bauchi told AFP.

    “We strongly suspect Boko Haram gunmen are behind the shootings,” the source added.

    Another local resident, Umar Mato, said the streets were deserted after the attack as soldiers “laid siege on the town looking for the gunmen.”

     

     

  • Boko Haram: Immigration loses 400 officers

    Boko Haram: Immigration loses 400 officers

    No fewer than 400 officers and men of the Nigerian Immigration Service (NIS) have been killed by Boko Haram insurgents, it was learnt yesterday.

    There have been 11 jail breaks across the country believed to have been carried out by insurgents in which many prison officers were killed, Senator Atiku Bagudu said yesterday.

    Bagudu is the chair, Senate Committee on Interior. He spoke in Abuja.

    He said the figures were given to members of his committee when they went on oversight function.

    He noted that though the country’s Northeast borders had posed some problems in an attempt to curtail the activities of insurgents, the deployment of technology and the increment in personnel would check the menace.

    He said: “We need to give more arms to the prison service. The prison service should not be considered a secondary arm of the security system, it is a major one.”

    He noted that the failure of the Senate to transfer Prisons Service from the Exclusive List to the Concurrent List during the Constitution amendment reflected the fear the lawmakers have for state police because prison officials also bear arms.

    Bagudu said the country’s border with Cameroon has always posed a problem.

    He said: “Chadians coming to the northeast are always armed and use firearms, because Chad had been at war.”

    He added: “We are members of the ECOWAS group of nations. We are committed to free entry and exit. Even if we seal our borders, we can’t stop ECOWAS members from coming into our country.

    “Fencing four thousand miles border will be very difficult. Technology has changed the way we monitor the borders, with increased use of technology and more personnel, we can achieve more with less spending.”

    He also commented on the voting on amendment to Section 29 of the Constitution which defined the age when a person comes to a full age, with an addition spelling out that a woman who is married is deemed to be of full age.

    He said: “The argument that brought about this furore is the renunciation of citizenship. There was an attempt to remove its second element which relates to a woman who is married and that failed.

    “It is a total misrepresentation that the Senate has approved child marriage. Marriage is regulated by the Marriage Act, Islamic laws and Customary Law. What you find missing in these laws is the absence of the definition of the age of marriage.

    Around the world, marriage below the age of 18 is allowed. I am not saying that it is right, but it is allowed. We were not debating child marriage, and that is not what we contemplated.

    Senator Akin Odunsi, (Ogun West) who also spoke on the controversial issue, noted that the Senate did not create the Section.

    Odunsi said the provision was extant in the Constitution and that the Review Committee recommended that it be removed, but the Senate could not raise the number of votes to delete it.

    The lawmaker noted that public reaction tended to indicate that the Senate inserted the clause into the Constitution.

    He insisted that it was wrong to say that the Senate passed a law on child marriage.

    On Local Government autonomy, Senator Odunsi said although the Senate voted against the recommendation, there was still need for the third tier of government to be well funded so that they could meet their obligations to the people.

    “Funding of local governments at the moment is inadequate. I think we can only expect that the state governments should adequately finance local government. This is because they are the closest to the people and they need to carry out their responsibilities to the people,” he said.

    He explained that most Senators felt that granting local autonomy amounted to creating a state within a state.

  • Shettima: I support dialogue with Boko Haram sect

    Borno State Governor Kashim Shettima has said his administration supports Federal Government’s decision to dialogue with the moderate elements within the Boko Haram sect.

    Shettima, who spoke yesterday in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Maiduguri, the state capital, noted that most conflicts in the world, including the country’s 1967-1970 civil war, were sorted out at the conference table.

    He said: “Unless we want to engage in an endless war, I believe it is irrational for anyone to oppose dialogue as a means of resolving conflicts.

    “I see no reason why we should not engage the moderate elements in Boko Haram, who are willing to lay down their arms and who have recognised the territorial integrity of the nation, in a dialogue.

    “The Northern Ireland problem was eventually resolved through dialogue; today, the Israelis are talking to their Palestinian cousins and many other global conflicts, much more complicated than ours, were eventually resolved through dialogue.”

    The governor said the Federal Government had nothing to lose because it was negotiating from a position of strength.

    Shettima said although the Columbian rebels were talking with their government, it did not stop the government from attacking their position.

    He added that though there were elements within the Boko Haram sect, who were opposed to dialogue, this should not stop the government from negotiating with the moderate members of the sect that were ready and willing to do so.

    “I am for dialogue and will always be for dialogue. I will always support any Nigerian who wants peace; we support Federal Government’s dialogue with the Boko Haram,” he said.

    The governor also dismissed the claim in some quarters that the Boko Haram crisis was fermented as part of a grand design by Muslims to Islamise the country, saying that majority of the victims of the sect were Muslims.

    “In fact, at the outset of the insurgency, churches were never targeted. They were killing village, district and ward heads, who are largely Muslims.”

    He described members of the sect as fringe elements “whose condition is further aggravated by poverty and illiteracy”.

     

  • Could Boko Haram possibly be right ?

    Could Boko Haram possibly be right ?

    Make no mistake about it. I totally disagree with their methods. I abhor their violence. I loathe the taking of innocent lives. I detest their bestial, savage, barbaric killing of innocent school children. But then, could there possibly be something right about Boko Haram’s claim that western education is sin? The majority of Nigeria’s western educated elite so much vindicate Boko Haram’s position that the sect certainly does not need the current shedding of blood and wasting of lives to make its point. In any case what is sin? In my view it is a violation of God’s laws such as lying, stealing, murder, adultery etc. It is a breaching of moral codes. It is a negation of ethical standards.

    Most of Nigeria’s western educated elite particularly in public office exhibit these vices on an industrial scale. They steal. They lie. They cheat. Their wanton corruption has stunted a remarkably endowed country’s development resulting in the continuing avoidable deaths of millions of valuable lives. Yes, western education nurtures the intellect. It liberates the mind. It has led to the astonishing accomplishments of humanity in diverse spheres of endeavour. But it does not necessarily endow the individual with the moral values imperative for maintaining a decent, sane, humane and healthy society.

    Most of Nigeria’s western educated elite simply utilise their acquired knowledge and skills to commit the most heinous sins against their country and fellow country men and women. A good example are those bankers whose venality and moral depravity resulted in the collapse of several banks with severe, damaging implications for millions of depositors and shareholders and with consequences that continue to haunt the fragile Nigerian economy. But let us move to another set of Nigeria’s western educated elite whose actions amply validate Boko Haram’s position that western education is sin.

    The country has 36 governors. These eminent citizens represent the cream of the country’s western educated elite. Among them are medical doctors, lawyers, soldiers, engineers, architects, academics and so on. These respected citizens came together and voluntarily formed an association, the Nigerian Governors Forum (NGF). 35 of these highly enlightened citizens gathered in a room to elect their chairman. No one was coerced there. We assume that they knew the meaning of elections and the implications of democracy before participating in the election. They voted. The votes were counted. The process was electronically recorded. A winner emerged. He had 19 votes. His opponent had 16 votes. Yet, the minority claims to be the majority. To these eminent western educated Nigerians, 16 is greater than 19. The loser not only parades himself as Chairman of the NGF, his faction has opened a secretariat in Abuja! This is is lying. This is cheating. This is deceit. This is a form of robbery. This is brazen fraud. This is original sin. Boko Haram members must be having a good laugh. They are surely vindicated. Western education, at least in this case, is grievous sin.

    But let us go to a more tragic scenario. In 2011 we trooped to the polls and elected as President a man called Dr Goodluck Jonathan. As a child he had no shoes. We identified with him. He went to the redemption camp and publicly knelt down before the revered Pastor Enoch Adeboye. We admired his humility. Many also voted for him because he is the first Nigerian President to have a university degree, a Ph. D for that matter. The Ph. D is the highest attainment in western education. The holder is a Doctor of philosophy. He is assumed to be sound not only in knowledge but in character. He should be a beacon of integrity. But what are we seeing? This Ph.D holder is proving to be even more coarse, brutish and utterly disdainful of the rule of law, constitutionalism and the values of democracy than his rustic predecessor and benefactor who has now been publicly and irreparably deconstructed by General Alabi Isama as a blundering, cowardly and utterly incompetent General. But that is a matter for another day.

    This Ph.D holder, despite denials by his aides, is clearly the one behind the crisis in the NGF. He openly expressed his opposition to Governor Rotimi Amaechi’s re-election as NGF Chairman. The presidency actively sought to coerce and intimidate governors against re-electing Amaechi. The election held. Amaechi won. The Ph.D holder lost face. As an academic and supposed intellectual, would he accept the verdict? Not on your life. He publicly recognised the loser as the winner. He lent the weight of his prestigious office to falsehood. He encouraged deceit. He embraced lies. I hope the respected Pastor Adeboye is reading this in case somebody wants to play the kneeling game at the redemption camp sometime in future! Somebody has suggested that elementary arithmetic may not necessarily be a precondition for obtaining a most distinguished Ph. D. I disagree. For, it is not impossible that in the animal kingdom of Zoology, 16 is greater than 19. All hail! But then the tragedy got even messier.

    This admirable product of western education has done everything to undermine the legitimate government of RotimiAmaechi in Rivers State. He has divided the PDP in the state. He has caused mayhem in the state House of Assembly. He sanctioned, again according to the mysterious arithmetic of Zoology, the attempted impeachment of the Speaker by 5 members of a 32-member House. He has looked on indifferently as the Rivers State Commissioner of Police, Mbu John Mbu, continues to jeopardise the security of the state and compromise the personal safety of the Governor. To make matters worse, this Ph. D holder has allowed another Ph. D holder, Dr. Reuben Abati, to brazenly lie that the presidency has no hand in the Abuja instigated descent to anarchy in Rivers State. Luckily, the most amiable and adorable First Lady and co-President of Nigeria, Dame Patience Jonathan, has exposed the highly cerebral Dr.Abati’s lies.

    She told a group of 16 Bishops from the South-South who visited her on Wednesday of her grouse with Governor RotimiAmaechi. We now know why there is such a desperate attempt by Abuja to pull down Amaechi at all costs even if it means destabilizing the country and endangering our democracy. I once described the Jonathan presidency as a distracted one obsessed with his ambition for a second term in 2015. Many of my readers from the Niger Delta were unhappy with me. But the unfolding scenario in Rivers State proves this beyond doubt. For, Amaechi’s only crime is that he is suspected to have higher political aspirations in 2015 that may jeopardise Jonathan’s political interests.

    Let us, therefore, apologise to Boko Haram. They have a point. In many ways western education is a grievous sin if a Ph.D holder can perpetrate, directly and indirectly, the kind of atrocities being witnessed in Rivers state. Is the Boko Haram leader, Imam AbubakarShekau, reading this? Or can anybody reach him? Please drop your guns. Your point has been effectively made.

  • Boko Haram is Nigerians common enemy- Shehu of Borno

    Nigerians should see Boko Haram as a common enemy and not an attempt by Muslims to Islamise or divide the country, Alhaji Abubakar Ibn Garbai, the Shehu of Borno, said on Thursday.

    Garbai, who is a member of the Inter Religous Council of Nigeria, said this in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Maiduguri.

    “Boko Haram is not a deliberate attempt by Muslims to attack Christians; if it is, they would not have attacked me.

    “If it is a question of targeting only Christians, 13 of my district heads, two council members and many other Muslims would not have been killed.

    “The Emirs of Fika and Kano are Muslims, yet they were attacked by the sect, who also killed many other Muslims leaders.”

    He said that some Christians worked in his office and some were traditional title holders in his palace, adding that he held regular meetings with the Christian community in the state.

    “It is, therefore, clear that from top to bottom, there is nobody who is not affected.

    “Churches, mosques, parents and children were affected, so it is not a question of the group targeting only a particular group of Nigerians,” he stated.

    Garbai said that Nigerians had fought in the past to keep the country united and that they should do everything possible to sustain the nation’s corporate entity.

     

  • Boko Haram chief  Shekau’s in-laws arrested

    Boko Haram chief Shekau’s in-laws arrested

    The Defence Headquarters (DHQ) confirmed yesterday the arrest of Boko Haram leader Imam Abubakar Shekau’s in-laws.

    The raid in which the in-laws were arrested resulted in the recovery of some recorded audio messages of the insurgents, the DHQ said.

    Also, the DHQ said a recent encounter with the terrorists led to the death of Amir of Bulabulin Nganaram, one of the kingpins on the Joint Task Force’s (JTF’s) wanted list.

    It also confirmed that 58 detainees linked with Boko Haram insurgents had been released in Borno and Yobe states.

    DHQ spokesman Brig-Gen. Chris Olukolade, who made the disclosures at a briefing by the Joint Security Committee in Abuja, said the Special Forces in Adamawa, Borno, and Yobe states were not on any vengeance mission but purely on a mission to restore law and order.

    Gen. Olukolade said: “Troops on cordon and search operations in Bulabulin area in Maiduguri last week discovered a vast network of underground tunnels connecting houses and many bunkers, some which have the capacity to accommodate over 100 persons.

    “More corpses were also discovered in soak-away. Various weapons were also discovered in the same area.

    “Abubakar Shekau’s parents’ in-law were picked up in the raid which also discovered various audio recordings of terrorists’ messages. Recoveries are made almost on daily basis as the operation progresses.

    “The media have had opportunity to inspect some of the items recovered from the camps. The recoveries, among others, include: eight AK47 assault rifles, one G3 rifle, nine AK47 magazines, one Rocket Propelled Grenade charger, five Rocket Propelled Grenade, three FMC magazine, one G3 magazines, 14 IEDs and 166 rounds of 7.62mm Special.

    Others are 3 35mm Bazooka; 34 rounds of 5.56mm, 1,740 rounds of 303 inch, 10 rounds of 7.62 NATO, one round of .50mm, one dane gun, one locally made pistol and two mega phones.

    “In keeping with presidential directives, a total of 58 detainees linked with Boko Haram insurgents have been released in Borno and Yobe states.

    “These comprised 23 women and 35 children. Some of the teenagers confessed that they were conscripted to run errand for the terrorists who paid them paltry N5,000 to monitor troops and set public buildings ablaze. The women and children were handed over to the governors of Borno and Yobe states for onward rehabilitation and reintegration.”

    The Defence spokesman confirmed the death of a key leader of Boko Haram in Maiduguri.

    He said: “The mandate of Mr. President to the forces involves the destruction of all terrorist camps/bases, apprehension of perpetrators and bringing them to justice. This mandate has been substantially achieved with destruction of terrorists’ stronghold and bases. In the process, many captives of the terrorists especially women and children, were freed from the camps as their captors fled in disarray.

    “A recent encounter in the terrorists main enclaves in Bulabulin Nganaram, Aljajeri and Faluja in Maiduguri metropolis led to the death of Amir of Bulabulin Nganaram, one of the kingpins on the JTF wanted list. Many women and minors were rescued and handed over to their families by the JTF.

    “A number of terrorists have been apprehended by the Special Forces. Many of them have also died in battle with the forces. Various resources, including trained military police dogs facilitated the arrest of insurgents who try to infiltrate the cities after being dislodged from their bases at the outset of the operation.

    “Cordon and Search Operations have started enjoying tremendous cooperation of locals. Several terrorists, including their foreign members, are being tracked down. Key terrorists, especially those in the cadre of Amir as well as those helping in their renewed mobilisation and recruitment of minors are being hunted.”

    Olukolade insisted that the Special Operation had reduced the spate of bombings nationwide.

    He added: “Notwithstanding the sporadic asymmetric attacks on certain soft targets, you would have noticed a drastic reduction in bombings and attacks on places outside the North-East epicenter of the terrorists. The improved security situation as indicated in general assessment has resulted in the ongoing phased restoration of telecommunication services in the states where it had to be withdrawn at the beginning of operation. Hence, Adamawa State now has telecommunication services fully restored.

    “Highlight of developments on this operation will be discussed subsequently, but we must note that apart from the ongoing operations in the Northeast, there are other joint operations by the security agencies in other parts of the country.

    “These include the efforts to check the activities of oil theft and illegal bunkering in the Niger Delta, restoration of peace in the Plateau as well as tackling armed banditry, kidnapping and other violent crimes confronting our country. Let us look at the achievements and developments at these other on-going operations.”

    The Defence spokesman said the Special Forces had complied with the rule of engagement and they are now enjoying much cooperation from the civilian populace.

    He said: “As relative peace gradually returns to the affected states, peace and confidence building mechanism have been put in place to consolidate on the modest achievement.

    “One of the gains of the confidence building process is that civilian populace are now not only willing to volunteer information on suspected individuals in their vicinity but are prepared to get physically involved in apprehending them. Defence Headquarters Assessment teams who visited the states observed increased commercial activities as banks, markets and other public places have been opened and in business.

    “The forces in this operation are quite conversant with the rules of engagement. Constant monitoring is ongoing to ensure there is no violation and where there is, to instantly investigate and punish perpetrators.

    “Nigerians and our friends abroad must realise that the security operations were necessitated by the need to secure and restore the rights of Nigerian citizens who were being abused by the activities of terrorists.

    “The terrorists have not only violated Nigeria’s sovereignty, they have committed mindless atrocities against citizens and there is no way such abuse, lawlessness and hate ideology could be encouraged or allowed to continue.

    “While the forces will remain accountable, the prying eyes of various activists should equally focus on the unending and condemnable atrocities of terrorists rather than desperately trying to play to the gallery by seeking evidence to indict the forces of non-existent human rights abuses. The forces are not on any revenge mission but purely on a mission to restore law and order.”

    Although Olukolade praised the press for its understanding, he faulted some foreign reports on the Special Operation.

     

  • Boko Haram… Violence persists despite emergency

    Boko Haram… Violence persists despite emergency

    State of Emergency was declared to clip their wings. But, Boko Haram members have found a way where there seems to be no way to continue their campaign of violence against the government and the ordinary people, writes Reuters

    They crept up to the school under cover of darkness, armed with petrol and automatic weapons.

    Most of the teachers and pupils had fled, but some students, one teacher and headmaster Adanu Haruna were still in the compound, one of many rural boarding schools in Nigeria surrounded by forest and farmland.

    “They made the students line up and strip naked, then they made the ones with pubic hair lie face down on the ground,” Haruna said, eyes wide with horror at describing the attack on the iron-roofed school built by British colonisers in the 1950s.

    “They shot them point blank then set the bodies on fire.”

    The Mamudo government school, charred and smelling of scorched blood after 22 students and a teacher were killed there in the July 6 attack near Potiskum in Nigeria’s northeast, was the fourth to be targeted by suspected Boko Haram militants in less than a month.

    The attacks reveal much about the rebels who are fighting to revive a medieval Islamic caliphate in northern Nigeria, the type of state they are seeking to establish and the impact of their efforts to do so on the African economic powerhouse.

    In a video uploaded to the Internet on Saturday, Boko Haram’s purported leader Abubakar Shekau denied ordering the latest killings, saying Boko Haram does not itself kill small children, but he praised attacks on Western schools.

    “We fully support the attack on school in Mamudo, as well as on other schools,” he said. “Western education schools are against Islam … We will kill their teachers.”

    Boko Haram, a nickname which translates roughly as “Western education is sinful”, formed around a decade ago as a clerical movement opposed to Western influence, which the sect’s founder, Mohammed Yusuf, said was poisoning young minds against Islam.

    Yet security forces and politicians were the main targets of the armed revolt it started after Yusuf’s killing in a 2009 military crackdown that left 800 people dead.

    Since those days Boko Haram has splintered into several factions, including some with ties to al Qaeda’s Saharan wing, which analysts say operate more or less independently, despite Shekau’s loose claim to authority over them.

    Before June, there had been only a handful of attacks on the Western-style schools it so despises.

    An offensive against the insurgents since President Goodluck Jonathan declared a state of emergency in three remote northern states in May, wresting control of the far northeast from Boko Haram and pushing its fighters into hiding, has changed that.

    Across north-eastern Nigeria, schools are emptying out, threatening further radicalisation and economic decline in a region left behind by the country’s oil-rich Christian south.

    Nassir Salaudeen, a teacher whose son was killed in a strike on Damaturu government school on June 16, the first of the wave of recent attacks, said he had put all his efforts into his boy’s education in the hope he would get a good job.

    “They killed him in cold blood, just because he was a student and his father a teacher,” a tearful Salaudeen said. “I regret ever being educated.”

     

    “SOFT TARGETS”

     

    For some, the school attacks are a sign the offensive has weakened the Islamist group, which is still seen as the main security threat to Africa’s leading oil and gas producer.

    “Given the security clampdown, many of the places like police stations or the military are getting harder for Boko Haram to hit,” said Kole Shettima, chairman of the Centre for Democracy and Development. “Schools are soft targets.”

    But the attacks also reflect a radical ideology that resents modernity and yearns to wind back the clock to an era before West African lands were conquered by Europeans.

    Centuries ago northern Nigeria, like much of West Africa, was ruled by Islamic empires feeding off trans-Saharan trade routes connecting Africa’s forested interior with its Mediterranean coast.

    Boko Haram rarely gives statements to the media. But the little it has said suggests it wants to restore those glory days.

    Last year, the sect said it wanted to revive the 19th century caliphate of Usman Dan Fodio, an Islamic scholar who threw off corrupt Hausa kings and established strict Sharia law.

    When Britain established Nigeria as a territory, it agreed to spare the largely Muslim north’s leaders the activities of missionaries, who brought Christianity but also education and literacy that gave the south a head start over the North.

    The North was able to retain its Islamic culture but at the cost of suffering economically; political and economic power has shifted to the south and the education gap has played a role in that growing discrepancy.

    A lack of education and high youth unemployment has also helped Boko Haram’s Islamist ideology to thrive.

    “Boko Haram think the secular school system has brainwashed Nigerians to accept the post-colonial Western order and forget the Islamic ways that existed before,” said Jacob Zenn, an expert on the sect at the Washington-based Jamestown Foundation.

    The attacks, which the U.N. children’s fund (UNICEF) says have killed 48 students and seven teachers in the past month, aim to scare parents and their kids away from schools.

    “It says: ‘either take your children out of school or put them into an Islamist school we approve of’,” Zenn said, one that teaches only in Arabic and omits courses like science.

    He added that such schools need not necessarily be Boko Haram sponsored: there are conservative Islamic schools for children where they study under an Imam and the curriculum is all in Arabic and focused on the Koran. The sect accepts them.

     

    “SCHOOLS DESERTED”

     

    Many people are turning away from education altogether.

    “The risk isn’t worth it. These guys are just mindless,” said Mike Ojo, a mechanic in the north-eastern city of Maiduguri who is taking his three children out of school.

    Even if they stayed, many teachers have left, said teacher Ali Umar from a Maiduguri secondary school, and in many schools there are often too few teachers for the pupils who stay put, leaving them with little choice but to leave.

    “I am not prepared to die for teaching. Time to start looking for a new job,” he said, shrugging. “Most of our schools are deserted anyway.”

    The spot where Halima Musa’s husband was shot dead at their home on June 16 — in front of her and the children — is still caked with his dried blood, the wall pocked with bullet holes.

    They came at 3 a.m., guns blazing, demanding she open the door. She begged them to stop as they dragged the teacher out.

    “They shot him three times in the head and told me that this should be a lesson not to marry a western educated person or any person that works for President Jonathan,” she said, choking back tears in front of three traumatised children.

    Yobe State Education Commissioner Mohammed Lamin complained that the military had not done enough to protect schools from attack, even after they were targeted.

    Before the murderous assault on the Maumdo school, there had been an earlier attack on May 8, in which some property was burnt. Headmaster Haruna said the security forces he called for help patrolled initially but stopped after a week.

    The military was not immediately available to comment, but it has said in the past it is doing all possible to protect civilians while crushing the insurgents in its offensive.

    Schools are a devastating target for an impoverished region suffering a high rate of illiteracy, but Lamin says he is determined that Yobe’s children get educated.

    “These terrorists are trying to stop western education but we cannot allow them do that,” he said. “We must do everything to ensure children are safe in the school.”

     

  • Boko Haram leader Shekau’s in-laws arrested

    Boko Haram leader Shekau’s in-laws arrested

    As part of the ongoing crackdown on Boko Haram insurgents, the Defence Headquarters on Monday confirmed the arrest of the in-laws of the leader of the sect, Imam Abubakar Shekau.

    But it was silent on where the in-laws were being kept as at press time.

    The raid which led to the arrest of the in-laws resulted in the recovery of some recorded audio messages of the insurgents.

    Also, the DHQ said a recent encounter with the terrorists led to the death of Amir of Bulabulin Nganaram, one of the kingpins on the Joint Task Force wanted list.

    It, however, confirmed said 58 detainees linked with Boko Haram insurgents have been released in Borno and Yobe States.

    The spokesman for the Defence Headquarters, Brig-Gen. Chris Olukolade, who made the disclosures at a briefing by Joint Security Committee in Abuja, said the Special Forces in Adamawa, Borno, and Yobe states are not on any revenge mission but purely on a mission to restore law and order.

    Olukolade said: “Troops on cordon and search operations in Bulabulin area in Maiduguri last week discovered a vast network of underground tunnels connecting houses and many bunkers some which have the capacity to accommodate over 100 persons.

    “More corpses were also discovered in soak-away. Various weapons were also discovered in the same area.

    “Abubakar Shekau’s parents’ in-laws were picked up in the raid which also discovered various audio recordings of terrorists’ messages. Recoveries are made almost on daily basis as the operation progresses.”