Tag: boko haram

  • Emergency rule: Military police dogs arrest 56 Boko Haram insurgents

    Emergency rule: Military police dogs arrest 56 Boko Haram insurgents

    The Defence Headquarters (DHQ) yesterday said 56 Boko Haram insurgents had been arrested with the assistance of military police dogs.

    It also claimed that some terrorists moving from village to village in search of large quantity of food were tracked and apprehended following a tip-off from civilians.

    The Special Forces in Adamawa, Borno and Yobe have captured more enclaves/camps belonging to the insurgents.

    The claims could not be independently confirmed

    The Defence Headquarters’ spokesman, Brig-Gen. Chris Olukolade, said, in a statement, that the special operation yielded the recovery of seven packs of Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs), two Rocket Propelled Gun chargers, a rifle magazine, two machetes and bomb detonators.

    The statement said: “The intensive cordon and search operation being conducted by the troops of the Special Forces received a major boost from civilian cooperation in communities close to locations being focused in the operation yesterday.

    “A group of terrorists moving from village to village in search of large quantity of food were tracked and apprehended following a tip-off from civilians.

    “The group, which was moving around in a Toyota Land Cruiser Jeep with registration number Borno XA 428 ADM which is suspected to have been stolen, was eventually arrested at Daban Masara with weapons such as AK 47 rifle, single barrel shotgun, double hand shotgun and various calibres of ammunition.

    “In other locations, a total of 56 identified insurgents were apprehended with the help of military police dogs.

    “Items recovered from the arrested insurgents include seven packs of IEDs, two Rocket Propelled Gun chargers, a rifle magazine, two machetes, bomb detonators, camouflage and other military uniforms as well as medicines equipment, charms, seven vehicles, including a spot utility vehicle (SUV) and eight tri-cycles.

    “It is believed that some stranded terrorists are keen on establishing new camps. They are being trailed accordingly. There were also a few encounters with some insurgents in forest locations apart from the identified and destroyed camps.

    “The campaign to rid the nation’s territories of the insurgents continues.”

    In a follow-up interaction with our correspondent, Brig-Gen. Olukolade said: “We have captured many camps belonging to the insurgents. I won’t give you a specific figure, but the camps overrun have been significant.

    “The intelligence in locating these insurgents had been accurate. This is why the operation has been highly successful so far.”

    In another development, a top source involved in the special operation said: “Although we have recovered many arms and ammunition, it is still difficult to trace whether they belong to Al-Qaeda, Al-Sabab, Hezbollah or Ansarudin.

    “What is indisputable is that terrorist groups network all over the world. That is why we are not taking things for granted.

    “The fact is that the manufacturers of these arms sell to legitimate users. And no one knows whether these insurgents procure their arms and ammunition from some legitimate users.”

    On Boko Haram leaders declared wanted by the military, the source added: “We are not limiting our operation to only the leaders; every terrorist that is found would be arrested.

  • Boko Haram: JTF frees 38 suspects in Yobe

    The Joint Task Force in Yobe State on Friday  released 17 women and 21
    children in their custody.
    The release  according to JTF is in compliance with the directive of
    the defence headquarters that female suspects should be released as
    part of reconciliation measures with the Boko Haram sect.
    The detainees were presented to the state government by the spokesman
    of the JTF in the state,  Lieutenant Eli Lazarus.
    The JTF spokesman during the presentation  hoped that the release will
    justify the  purpose for which it was intended, adding  that other
    detainees will also be released in subsequent batches.
    The state  Attorney General and Commissioner of Justice, Ahmed Mustapha
    Goneri who received the suspects  thanked  the JTF and promised that “the  detainees will   be rehabilitated and integrated into the society”.
    He said the  state government  will give them  the needed trade  to
    start up life afresh.
    Bar. Ahmed called on the insurgents to embrace the action of the
    government and speed up the peace process.

     

  • Boko Haram leader Shekau’s associate found dead, says Defence Hqtrs

    Boko Haram leader Shekau’s associate found dead, says Defence Hqtrs

    The Defence Headquarters yesterday said an unnamed associate of Boko Haram leader, Abubakar Shekau, has been found dead.

    Director of Defence Information, Brig.-Gen. Chris Olukolade said the alleged terror agent was found dead by the Special Forces in the vicinity of Lake Chad.

    There is however no independent confirmation of the claim as reporters have no access to the battle front.

    Brig.-Gen. Olukolade added that two other suspected terrorists who were found at the scene were arrested. They are currently in the custody of the Multinational Joint Task Force.

    He said the three suspects were confirmed to have operated in Baga, one of the Boko Haram operational bases in Borno State.

    According to the military, the terrorists were in the process of crossing the border to Niger Republic when they met their ill fate.

    Brig.-Gen. Olukolade stated that more troops of the Nigeria Police Mobile Force have joined the operations by the Special Forces, as more towns are being secured in the operations to rid the nation of terrorist activities.

    “A terrorist believed to be a close associate of insurgents’ leader, Abubakar Shekau has been found dead as he ran errand for the leadership. The other two fellow terrorists, one of which is confirmed to be a Nigerien, are now in the custody of the Multinational Joint Task Force.

    “The three were in the process of crossing the border to the neighbouring Niger Republic through the Lake Chad. The three have been confirmed to have operated in Baga and participated in perpetrating arson and other atrocities around the vicinity of the town.

    “They have been relocating from place to place since they left Baga last month”, the statement added.

     

  • Joint Task Force ‘kills Boko Haram chief, three others’

    Joint Task Force ‘kills Boko Haram chief, three others’

    The Multinational Joint Task Force has captured three key Assembly Points of Boko Haram insurgents and killed three, including a high profile terrorist identified as Abba, the military said yesterday.

    Besides, the Force has arrested 25 suspected insurgents during a foiled bid to invade Maiduguri, the Borno State capital.

    But the insurgents killed a security operative.

    These disclosures were contained in a statement by the Defence Headquarters, signed by its spokesman, Brig.-Gen. Chris Olukolade, on the update on the ongoing special operation in Borno State and two others —Adamawa and Yobe —where a state of emergency is on.

    The statement said the Special Forces had also intercepted messages sent to fleeing insurgents, urging them not to give up but fight to the end.

    The statement said: “Troops of the Special Forces have intercepted messages sent to fleeing insurgents urging them not to give up but fight to the end.

    “The attempt by some of them to heed the call was foiled during the weekend as they were trailed to some settlements and towns towards the border where they plan to regroup.

    “Troops of the Multinational Joint Task Force carried out an operation which resulted in the capture and destruction of the insurgents’ assembly points sited on the outskirts of Kaneram Dan Katsina, Tumbu Dabino and Mallam Fatori area north of Baga.

    “The towns and settlements have now been secured while cordon-and-search operation is also ongoing in the area after the insurgents have been dislodged.”

    The statement which could not be independently confirmed, added: “Meanwhile, a total of 25 insurgents were rounded up while three died, including a high profile terrorist identified as Abba, who has been on the list of most wanted persons.

    “This incident happened during an encounter with troops of the task force as the insurgents were finalising moves to carry out an extensive terrorist operation around Maiduguri.

    “The captured ones were all apprehended with their weapons, which include rifles, pistols, double barrel guns and various calibres of ammunition, during a raid operation of the JTF in Kumshe and Bulunkutu area.

    “In Sambisa forest, troops combing the forest continue to make more discoveries.

    “A man who had been held hostage in the forest since last year escaped, bound in handcuffs as his captors fled during the troops’ attack on the biggest camp in the forest. The freed hostage is being treated by the Task Force.

    “The troops are dominating the forest as they find a number of fresh grave, more arms and ammunition, burnt vehicles and other equipment. More updates as the operation continues.”

     

  • FG’s ‘war on terror’ records tentative victory

    FG’s ‘war on terror’ records tentative victory

     

    Nuradin Mohammed used to resent and fear the troops who swept past his fish stall in this northeast Nigerian city on the trail of Islamist insurgents Boko Haram. Now, for the first time, he thinks they may be on his side.

    “We are pleased the president has finally recognized our peril and we pray his plan works,” Mohammed said, frying fish by the roadside as a crowd of young children looked on hungrily and trucks packed with troops rumbled past.

    President Goodluck Jonathan took a gamble when he launched a big offensive this month on Boko Haram’s four-year-old attempt to establish an Islamic state in mainly Muslim northern Nigeria.

    The crackdown risks stoking, rather than quashing the rebellion, but has so far met with a surprising degree of support in a region that has long accused the oil-rich Christian south of neglect.

    “We felt let down and ignored. We are afraid soldiers will come bullying the public, which makes people want to join the Boko Haram, but we hope this time is different,” Mohammed said.

    Only a few months ago, Jonathan was telling foreign leaders that Boko Haram was a small problem that would be over soon.

    In declaring an emergency on May 14 in Borno, Yobe and Adawmawa states and ordering thousands of troops and air strikes on suspected Islamist camps, he said they were “terrorists” whose “declaration of war” could not go unanswered.

    Civilians like Mohammed appear to have had enough of being caught in the crossfire of a rebellion that has killed thousands in Africa’s No. 1 oil producer and provoked fears of a descent into chaos in one of the continent’s most dynamic economies.

    Even usually critical northern governors and elders have been cautiously supportive of Christian southerner Jonathan’s new firm tactics, which include the offer of an amnesty to any militants who willingly surrender.

    “I now fully understand the strategy: show strength and be magnanimous at the same time,” previously critical northern opposition politician Alhaji Bashir Tofa told Reuters.

    But it will take more than just firmness to win against a movement that has proved remarkably resilient under the leadership of Abubakar Shekau, a fiery militant who likes to make finger-waving Internet videos holding a Kalashnikov.

    Ousted from Nigeria’s city centres in an earlier crackdown last year, the Islamists, whose name in the Hausa language means “Western education is sinful” withdrew to the remote semi-desert region of the northeast bordering with Chad, Cameroon and Niger.

     

    In this isolated zone, they scared off local officials and took de facto control of at least 10 out of 27 council areas.

    This recalled what happened in 2012 in Mali, where al Qaeda-allied Islamist rebels seized control of the Sahel country’s Saharan north before taking several cities and towns. A French military offensive drove them back earlier this year.

    In the past two months Boko Haram mounted some of their boldest attacks to date, including one that killed 55 people.

    Jonathan’s administration knows that just sending in more troops will never totally defeat a foe that can hide among the civilian population, even if that population has been put off by Boko Haram attacks on churches, universities and markets.

    “In some ways youths had more in common with Boko Haram than soldiers and wealthy politicians,” said Borno public servant Ali Shuwa. Behind him, scrawny goats chew on a rubbish pile.

    “But I think people are tired of the fighting.”

    As with the “surge” of extra United States soldiers that former President George Bush ordered into Iraq in 2007 to prevent the country disintegrating into ethnic and sectarian bloodshed, experts say Nigeria’s military needs a change of tactics that will motivate the population to actively cooperate with it.

    “The major focus should be on securing the local population. It is popular legitimacy that will provide the intelligence necessary to fight insurgents and terrorists,” said Kole Shettima, a Nigerian pro-democracy activist.

    Regarding this, Jonathan agreed to free some detained Boko Haram suspects this week, including all women and children, one of Boko Haram’s top demands. This is a sign he is willing to take steps towards reconciliation with moderate elements.

    It reinforced the message that a panel he set up to try to establish a dialogue with Boko Haram is sincere.

    “This is the most concerted effort yet … They’ve hit it with a big stick and then dangled a carrot in front of them,” said Peter Sharwood-Smith, Nigeria head of security firm Drum Cussac. “They now realize the huge task in front of them.”

    Maiduguri, the once thriving hub of an ancient Islamic trading route, has been decimated by the conflict. Soldiers hunch behind sandbag bunkers on streets strewn with rubble from bomb blasts.

    Traders hang carpets and piles of sandals hopefully outside corrugated-iron roofed shacks, while young boys peddle oranges and watermelons from wooden carts. But there are few buyers.

    Boko Haram has infiltrated so deeply here that some parents don’t know their children are members. Civilians don’t want to turn against insurgents because informants are often killed.

    “It could be him or her watching us,” said Ali, a teenage boy selling jerry cans of fuel, pointing out onto the street. “People have been killed just on a rumor of informing.”

    It was in Maiduguri in 2002 that a cleric called Mohammed Yusuf founded a radical Islamist movement initially tagged ‘Nigeria’s Taliban’, but later nicknamed ‘Boko Haram’ because of its virulent opposition to Western influences.

    A military crackdown against an uprising by the group in 2009 killed 800 people. This included Yusuf, who died in police custody, a catalyst for years of reprisals on security forces.

    Jonathan says he will clamp down on military excesses after reports of human rights abuses by soldiers in the northeast, although rights groups and foreign diplomats think these may continue going unpunished given the secrecy of the operation.

    Rights activists say soldiers carry out extra-judicial killings and torture suspects never face trial.

    “We welcome that Jonathan has finally recognized publicly the abuses but these words must be turned into actions for his operation to have legitimacy,” a western diplomat in Abuja said.

    Security sources say Jonathan’s army faces a tough task in defeating resilient Islamist fighters, who have shown their ability to re-arm and counter-attack and who know the remote southern fringe of the Sahara better than most soldiers.

    A military source in Maiduguri told Reuters they had found the first days of the latest offensive harder than expected against “an enemy willing to hide anywhere and do anything”.

    Boko Haram is not one cohesive group and new independent splinter-operations are emerging, making negotiations difficult.

    The longer this goes one, the costlier it will be, and not only in human terms. Nigeria spent 700 billion naira ($4.4 bln) on security in the four months to April, the central bank said.

    Porous borders with Chad and Niger have been used to transport weapons from Libyan and Malian conflict zones and Western governments are concerned about Boko Haram’s increasing ties with al Qaeda linked groups in the Sahel – a fact which could draw Nigeria’s neighbors further into the conflict.

    “Even the U.S. government couldn’t contain guerrilla fighters in Afghanistan and Iraq, so do you think we can?” Sakuria Mohammed, a Borno legislator told Reuters in Maiduguri, where his mother was kidnapped by Boko Haram this month.

    “The fighting is a symptom and therefore the military will not solve this. We must create jobs, rebuild this once great region and give youths a better option than Boko Haram.”

     

    Culled from Reuters

  • Boko Haram must be stopped, says Jonathan

    Boko Haram must be stopped, says Jonathan

    President Goodluck Jonathan said yesterday that the state of emergency imposed on three states was to stop the excesses of the Islamic sect, Boko Haram.

    Speaking with reporters on the sidelines of the 21st ordinary session of the Assembly of Heads of State and Government of the Africa Union (AU) in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, Jonathan said that the excesses must stop, no matter the cost.

    According to him, his administration would not fold its arms while members of the sect continue to kill innocent citizens at will.

    Stressing that the government has what it takes to confront the terrorists, the President said their evil activities were already being confronted, with his recent declaration of state of emergency in Borno, Yobe and Adamawa states.

    Jonathan said: “The excesses of Boko Haram must stop. That is the decision of this present government now. It must stop; whatever it will cost the government, it must stop.”

    Even as he maintained that terrorism is a global problem with the United States and United Kingdom and other countries having their shares, the President said his administration was working hard to contain it in terms of immediate, medium and long terms approaches.

    Noting that military intervention is compulsory for the short term measures, Jonathan said that a lot of weapons found their way into Nigeria due to the Libya crisis.

    Declaring that all the illegal weapons must be mopped up, he said the threat posed by the Islamic sect to the country and the sub region is fairly big and could be more devastating, if the government did not move fast.

    Because of difficulty of their operations in Nigeria, he said, some members of the sect recently moved into Niger Republic, with suicide attacks in two places simultaneously. About 20 soldiers died.

    The President continued: “For the short term, of course, there must be military intervention, we must beef up security, we must change the security architecture to make sure that we detect that something is about to happen before it happens so that we will be able to stop it.”

    “We have stopped a number of incidents in the country. It is just that the few that happened affect life and whenever life is affected, you will not even think that somebody is doing anything. That is why recently, I even had to declare a state of emergency in three states so that we go all out to make sure that we seize these weapons.”

    “We must comb the whole place to seize all these weapons and so on. A lot of free weapons come in because of the Libya crisis. We must seize them. They are illegal weapons and must be seized and you cannot do that without declaring a state of emergency to enable the military enter any house, whether it is a residential building, it is a church, a mosque, a shrine, anywhere, hotel, anything that we suspect, we will be able to enter and seize these weapons.

    “In the short term, it is to seize these weapons. That is why those three states we have the worst cases, we declared a state of emergency. By the time we finish combing, we would have not just stopped it there but we would have seized most of the weapons they are using. That is the short term.” He stated

  • Boko Haram: US secretary of state Kerry meets Jonathan

    Boko Haram: US secretary of state Kerry meets Jonathan

    … Stresses respect for human rights

    United States Secretary of State, John Kerry, who last week expressed concern about allegations of gross human rights violations by Nigerian forces fighting the Boko Haram sect, raised the issue with President Goodluck Jonathan directly on Saturday, a U.S official said.

    Kerry sat beside President Jonathan at an African Union dinner and discussed the matter privately much as he has raised it publicly, defending Nigeria’s right “to combat terrorism but (saying) government security forces have to do so smartly (and) respect human rights,” the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, told reporters.

    Reuters reports that Nigerian troops last week used jets and helicopters to bombard targets in their biggest offensive since the Boko Haram group began a revolt almost four years ago to establish a breakaway Islamic state in the northeast of the country.

    On May 17, Kerry took the unusual step of saying that he was “deeply concerned by credible allegations that Nigerian security forces are committing gross human rights violations, which, in turn, only escalate the violence and fuel extremism.”

     

  • PFN supports emergency rule

    •Demands compensations for Boko Haram victims

    The declaration of emergency rule in the north eastern states of Adamawa, Yobe and Borno, has received the full-backing of the Pentecostal Fellowship of Nigeria (PFN).

    It said the President was right to have acted to halt the orgy of violence and terrorism in the nation with the declaration.

    The National President of the body, Rev Dr Felix Omobude, told reporters in Lagos that the President deserves full commendation for the declaration.

    Omobude, however, appealed to troops drafted to the affected states to flush out the terrorists “within the ambits of the law and respect for fundamental human rights.”

    He said: “It is important that the exercise is conducted with clinical precision to avoid incidents of collateral damage and minimal disruption of normal life.”

    While urging Nigerians to support the troops in its assignment, the PFN helmsman cautioned politicians to be circumspect in their utterances.

    Omobude also reiterated the demands for compensations for victims of the Boko Haram insurgency.

    He argued: “It is important that houses and buildings that belong to religious institutions, schools, individuals and corporate bodies be built and given back to their owners who have suffered unnecessarily for the state of insecurity.”

    The cleric said the body will be willing to present comprehensive documentations and evidence backing such claims should the government be interested.

    On the direction of the new leadership, he said all state chapters have been mandated to build a “rebranded PFN” through internal appraisals.

    He urged Christians to maintain peace while being alert and vigilant.

  • Committee meets with Boko Haram suspects

    Presidential Committee on Dialogue and Peaceful Resolution on security challenges in northern Nigeria on Saturday held a closed door meeting with detained suspected members of the Boko Haram Islamic group and visited victims of the various bomb blast in Kaduna.
    The committee members visited the St. Andrews Protestant Church inside the Jaji military cantonment and Rita’s Catholic Church, Ungwan Yero Kaduna before holding meeting with some of the detained suspects.
    The Committee members did not disclose the details of  the meeting which was attended by senior Police Officers in the state, while Journalists were told to leave the vicinity.
    There was however a mild drama at the headquarters of the Armed Forces Command and Staff College (AFCSC) when the Chairman of the Committee, Kabiru Tanimu Turaki led other members of the committee on a visit.
    The Chairman was told that the College Commandant, AVM Effiong Osim cannot receive them because he was at a meeting with the Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Defence.
    An angry Chairman who is also the Minister for Special Duties said “I am a minister of the Federal Republic and this is a Presidential Committee. Who is that Permanent Secretary. How could you say the Commandant cannot receive use”.
    The College Commandant and his principal officers, including the Permanent later came out to meet the committee and still angry, the Minister said “how can you say you cannot meet with us because you are holding meeting with a Permanent Secretary? I am a Minister and this is a presidential committee.
    “I have left my job because of this assignment and have not attended council meeting for the past five weeks. Whatever we are doing here takes precedence over any other thing”.
    The commandant who was full of apologies told the Minister that there was a communication breakdown as he never said he cannot meet with the committee because he was attending a meeting saying “we are all here for the security of the nation”.
    After a closed door meeting with the officials of the college, the committee members addressed some of the victims, assuring them that the government was aware of their plight and will not abandon them, but will do everything possible to ensure that they are comfortable.
    The Committee members were conducted round the St Rita’s Catholic Church by the Chairperson of the caretaker committee of the church, Mrs Cecila Michael who told them that four people died from the October 2012 blast that hit the church.
    Speaking with newsmen after the visit, the Minister said they were surprised at the level of destruction, pointing out that they will do everything possible to ensure that a lasting solution was found to the insecurity in the country.
    He said “we have seen the damages that have been inflicted by several act of insurgency against public and private property. We have also met with some victims who have sustained various degree of injuries. We have also seen and interacted with family members of some of the victims across board.
    “This is regrettable, it is unfortunate and needless. People can see clearly from the high powered nature of this committee the cleat intention of government to send a clear message to victims and other people that have been affected directly and indirectly that government cares and will look at ways of assisting them.
    “However, government will not allow this unfortunate state of affairs to continue. That is why the President has offered an olive branch through this committee. So, we are calling on members of the Boko Haram and others aggrieved individuals to come and talk to us with a view to resolving all issues peacefully. I hope that people will realise that government will not sit down and allow itself to be blackmailed,” the Minister stated
  • Emergency: Soldiers rescue nine women, children held hostage by Boko Haram

    Emergency: Soldiers rescue nine women, children held hostage by Boko Haram

    Freedom came yesterday for six children and three women held as ransom by the Boko Haram Islamist sect in Bama, Borno State.

    The captives were rescued by Federal troops who overran three camps of the sect in Sambisa forest, a stretch of 16-kilometre uncultivated mass of trees and shrubs in central Borno, the Defence Headquarters announced yesterday.

    Three other captives–a woman and her two children– were, however, missing. The authorities said a search was on to locate them.

    The captives were all seized at the Bama Police Station by the insurgents when they invaded the town on May 7.

    No fewer than 50 people were killed during the invasion.

    Several houses were also set ablaze by the sect’s members who also attacked the prison in the town and set about 100 inmates free.

    The Director of Defence Information, Brigadier General Chris Olubolade, told journalists in Abuja that the women and children were rescued by the Special Forces.

    He showed reporters a video recording and photographs of the freed hostages.

    The abducted women and children were shown in a recent You Tube video by the Boko Haram leader, Abubakar Shekau.

    Olukolade was silent on Shekau’s whereabouts.

    He said the harsh conditions of the forest must have taken a toll on the yet-to-be-found mother and her two children.

    The Major General Lawrence Ngubane–led operational assessment team raised by the Defence Headquarters said in a report that all the terrorist camps in northern and central Borno had been neutralised by the federal troops.

    The video clips showed what the DHQ described as a makeshift clinic of the insurgents, their destroyed camps in the forest, operational vehicles, fuel and water storage tanks. Olukolade said some of the vehicles and other property were set ablaze by the terrorists themselves before fleeing.

    The video clips also showed the troops in friendly interactions with residents of communities in some of the localities under the emergency rule.

    Olukolade said the troops had been adhering strictly to the rules of engagement, adding that no civilian casualty had been recorded.

    In a message to the troops, the Chief of Defence Staff, Admiral Ola Sa’ad Ibrahim, commended them for demonstrating a high level of professionalism in the operations.

    He said the feat performed by the soldiers was a major achievement in the process of restoring normalcy to communities hitherto held captive by the insurgents.

    Ibrahim enjoined them to continue to adhere strictly to the rules of engagement and operational codes of conduct, stressing that the exercise was a major test case on the capacity of the security forces to manage the nation’s security challenges.

    He said: “Troops must not make themselves vulnerable. Those who carry arms against the state and citizens are the ones we are fighting against.

    “Troops must exhibit a high standard of commitment and discipline in all steps taken during this operation. This is not an exercise but a real operation.”

    Admiral Ibrahim expressed the confidence that the terrorists would be defeated in record time, considering the superiority of the troops in terms of training and support from Nigerians.