Tag: boko haram

  • ‘Boko Haram members using fake military camouflage’

    ‘Boko Haram members using fake military camouflage’

    The Nigerian Army on Friday in Abuja decried the rate at which the Boko Haram insurgents have been using fake military camouflage to attack civilians.

    Maj.-Gen. Mobolaji Koleoso, the Chief of Civil- Military Affairs in the Nigerian Army, said this while briefing journalists on the security situation in the country.

    He said the Army had observed with dismay the illegal possession and abuse of military camouflage by the Boko Haram insurgents.

    “This trend is indeed worrisome, hence the need to enlighten the public to be cautious and report suspicious persons using illegal camouflage to relevant security agencies.

    “A recent exchange of gun fire with the insurgents in the North Eastern part of the country which resulted in a large number of causalities on their side showed that the insurgents were dressed in fake military camouflage.

    “For the unsuspecting populace, these insurgents would have been misconstrued as soldiers of the Nigerian Army,’’ he added.

    Koleoso explained that the army had been erroneously accused of heinous crimes on innocent citizens, “not knowing that the Boko Haram insurgents have been the perpetrators of this dastardly act.’’

    On the Daura attack in Katsina State, Koleoso said that the 35 Battalion of the Nigerian Army received a distress call at about 10 p.m. on Thursday and the troops moved into Daura to take charge of the situation.

    He said that in the ensuing firefight, two soldiers were killed and an officer was shot and wounded.

    According to him, two Boko Haram terrorist were killed, while three escaped with their vehicle but had an accident and died.

    “Some quantities of Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs) were recovered, while the two Golf cars used by the terrorists, 10 AK47 riffles and a large quantity of ammunition were recovered,’’ the News Agency of Nigeria quoted the Army chief as saying on Friday.

    Koeloso said that some of the terrorists escaped with gun shots wounds and appealed to the public to report to the nearest security agency any person with bullet wounds.

     

  • Air Force jets, gunships to attack Boko Haram targets

    Air Force jets, gunships to attack Boko Haram targets

    The military swung into action yesterday, imposing a dusk-to-dawn curfew on Adamawa State where soldiers patrolled the streets.

    Military jets from the Nigeria Air Force 75 Strike Unit were flying very low around the state capital, Yola.

    A statement signed by the Public Relations Officer of 23 Brigade, Yola, Lt. Jaafaru Nuhu, announced the curfew.

    He said: “Sequel to the presidential declaration of state of emergency in Borno, Yobe and Adamawa states by the President and Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, President Goodluck Jonathan, a 6pm to 6am curfew has been imposed on Adamawa State.

    “All law-abiding citizens are advised to abide by the curfew,” the statement said.

    The security situation has remained tense, with armed robbers striking super markets and other places in the city

    In Borno State, a massive military operation to enforce Tuesday’s declaration of a state of emergency began yesterday.

    More than 2,000 troops reportedly entered the state, where they launched an offensive, raiding a suspected Boko Haram hideout in a game reserve, according to military sources quoted by French News Agency AFP.

    Military jets were deployed in all the three states of Borno, Yobe and Adamawa.

    Reuters reported that two jets were seen arriving in Yola. Two other jets were deployed in Borno and Yobe.

    Air Force spokesman Air Commodore Yusuf Anas confirmed to Reuters by telephone that “air assets”, including helicopter gunships as well as jets, had been sent in support of the extra troops being deployed for the operation. He declined to give further details.

    The entire Nigerian military is involved in this operation, including the Air Force,” Defence spokesman Brigadier-General Chris Olukolade told AFP.

    “Definitely, air strikes will be used when necessary,” he said.

    A force of “several thousand” soldiers along with fighter jets and helicopter gunships have been deployed for the offensive in Borno, Yobe and Adamawa states, he added.

    Telephone connections to Borno and Yobe were cut off yesterday, apparently due to the destruction of masts by the terrorists.

    An Associated Press journalist in Maiduguri, the capital of Borno state, found cell-phone services unavailable since early Thursday morning on all the major mobile phone carriers. Mobile phone numbers belonging to government officials and military officials in Borno and Yobe states could not be reached.

     A military source who requested anonymity told AFP that operations had started in at least one area of Borno state, the epicentre of the insurgency.

    “Our men raided some terrorist camps in the Sambisa Game Reserve” in northern Borno, early on Wednesday, he said. In January, the military stormed Boko Haram training facilities in the same area.

    The source added that 2,000 troops had been deployed in Borno but declined to comment on the number of forces sent to Yobe and Adamawa.

    Army spokesman Brigadier General Ibrahim Attahiru refused to discuss figures.

    Residents in all three states have reported seeing an increased number of military personnel.

    Zangina Kyarimi, who lives in the remote town of Marti in northern Borno towards the border with Chad, told AFP that “large military teams” arrived late Wednesday.

    “I saw dozens of military vans and trucks accompanied by tanks,” he said by phone from the town, which is considered a Boko Haram stronghold.

    “We are afraid of what might happen in the coming days. We are thinking of leaving,” he said.

    The security forces on Thursday told banks to close in the town of Gashua in Yobe State, where suspected Boko Haram fighters attacked the police and a series of buildings on April 26, resident Musa Saminu said.

    “Around 30 military vans passed through the town…They were heavily armed. Some of them went to the banks and asked them to close down as a precaution,” he told AFP.

    Red Cross spokesman Nwakpa O. Nwakpa said the organisation was prepared to offer relief to civilians impacted by the military operation.

    Soldiers have been accused of massive rights abuses in campaigns against Boko Haram, which may have amounted to crimes against humanity, according to Human Rights Watch.

    The US State Department has warned that any “heavy-handed” tactics or disregard for human rights during the emergency operations could damage bilateral relations.

    State Department spokesman Patrick Ventrell said the U.S. government was deeply concerned about violence in northern Nigeria, saying its severity was such that it may spill across the borders.

    “The declaration of states of emergency in Borno, Yobe and Adamawa states reflects the worsening cycle of violence in northern Nigeria,” he said.

    “We have made clear to the Nigerian government that its heavy-handed response to insecurity in northern Nigeria and the failure to address human rights violations will potentially affect our ability to provide security assistance going forward,” Ventrell added.

    “All you’re doing is giving the military more powers than they had, but they were already far exceeding the powers … and violating human rights massively,” Lucy Freeman, Amnesty International’s deputy programme director, told Reuters by phone.

    Human Rights Watch Nigeria researcher Eric Guttschuss said: “If the military continues its practice of targeting civilians, there is a risk of massive abuses during this offensive … the military’s tactics have helped fuel the spiraling violence.”

    The Boko Haram conflict is estimated to have cost 3,600 lives since 2010, including killings by the security forces.

  • How Nigeria can survive, by Southern Assembly

    The Southern Nigeria Peoples Assembly(SNPA) has said that Nigeria can only survive, if urgent solutions are found to the prevailing contentious national issues germane to its peaceful co-existence.

    Among the challenges requiring urgent attention, in the group’s view, are the flawed 1999 Constitution, rising insecurity and Boko Haram insurgency, corruption and restructuring of the polity.

    The SNPA, which is hosting its delegate conference in Lagos on Monday at the Eko Hotels, Victoria Island, will consider the national question through brainstorming sessions anchored by its arrowheads, including former Vice President Alex Ekweme, Chief Edwin Clark and Bishop Bolanle Gbonigi, who is expected to lead the Southwest delegates to the conference.

    A statement by one of its conveners, Senator Tony Adefuye, said that highlights of the Lagos conference would include the debate on the on-going constitution review by the national Assembly, amnesty for Boko Haram, corruption and national development, the national centenary dialogue and re-negotiation as the basis for national unity and emergency preparation for the prompt arrest of the anticipated flood disaster this year.

    At the group’s brainstorming session in Uyo, Akwa ibom state capital, tagged: ‘Building a united and cohesive Nigeria’, the delegates advised President Goodluck Jonathan to rid his government and the nation’s security forces of all persons of dubious loyalty and treat the activities of the Boko Haram sect as treason.

    SNPA also suggested that, until the security situation in the North improves, none of the Southern youths should be posted to the troubled areas for the post-tertiary compulsory one year national service. Gbonigi said: “The security situation has continued to deteriorate. Kidnapping for ransom has become a rapidly blooming business as our cities and villages swarm with armies of unemployed youths. People are no longer shocked when dozens of their citizens are gunned down and bombed out by the Boko Haram sect. The massacres have become routine”.

    On corruption, the association said: “President Goodluck Jonathan and all the organs of government, especially the judiciary, should demonstrably and firmly prosecute the war against corruption without fear or favour, with no sacred cow spared, to serve as deterrent to others. On fact, government should fast tract the prosecution of all those identified culprits in the probe reports according to the law. In repositioning the country for the attainment of the Vision 20-20-20, the leadership must sanitise the economy”.

    The assembly also called for the convocation of a national dialogue to produce a truly peoples’ federal constitution to guarantee a unified and stable nation. It urged the Northern leaders to take more proactive responsibility by managing their restive youths, with a view to bringing the Boko Haram insurgency to an end. The group also advised that the six geo-political zone structure should be formalised and reflected in the constitution as the federating units.

    Gbonigi said that, if the government accepts to dialogue with tnhe Boko Haram sect, it should also muster the courage to dialogue with all Nigerians to formally air their grievances.

    On the constitution review, the assembly observed that, while the National Assembly has the power to amend the existing constitution, it cannot guarantee a peoples’ constitution for the country.

    The SNPA also called on the government to improve electricity supply and fight the infrastructure battle across the sectors.

  • Almajiris and the scourge of Boko haram

    Almajiris and the scourge of Boko haram

    SIR: The Boko Haram menace did not start in a day. The adage that says “An idle hand is the devils workshop” rings true with the case of the Almajiri’s. How can parents who give birth to children throw them to the streets to fend for their selves? Instead of sending them to proper schools, they are enrolled in Arabic teaching centres where they are taught about Islam. Islamic clerics who are supposed to act as teachers and mentors use the opportunity to introduce radical beliefs thereby brainwashing these pupils as tools of violence that then go about killing innocent people and being suicidal in nature.

    The meaning of the name ‘Almajiri’-implies Islamic student. For those of us fortunate to have lived in the north, we see these Almajiri’s in large numbers loitering around the streets wearing tattered clothes with bowl in their hands looking for the next available meal. The question is, if these young kids grow up, what will be their fate?

    They see the rich getting richer (who send their children to the best schools at home and abroad). The state government and religious leaders of the north are to be held responsible for this dereliction of duty where lack of proper enlightenment of the masses on health and welfare, benefits of family planning, provision of educational institutions have been neglected by those entrusted to govern these regions. Yet, they use government funds meant for the citizens of the state to enrich themselves and are now wondering how Boko Haram has become a menace.

    • Babajide Awobiyi

    Sabo-Yaba, Lagos.

     

  • Boko Haram in new video: we won’t free women, kids

    Boko Haram in new video: we won’t free women, kids

    Sect rejects amnesty again

    AFTER a long while, Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau made another video appearance yesterday.

    The group claimed responsibility for two recent attacks in the northeast where many people were killed.

    Besides, it hinted that women and children are among its hostages.

    In the video is Shekau, who has been declared a global terrorist by the United States, seated on a rug with a kalashnikov resting behind his right shoulder. The group also rejected, once again, the Federal Government’s plan to give its members amnesty.

    It had ealier dismissed the amnesty proposal, saying it should be the one to give Nigeria amnesty.

    “We are the ones that carried out the Bama attack,” Shekau said in Hausa, referring to the May 7 assault that killed 55 people, mostly soldiers and policemen. In the video, he also takes responsibility for the April 16 raid in the town near Lake Chad that sparked clashes with soldiers which killed nearly 200.

    The military has been accused of causing scores of deaths in the Baga violence by deliberately setting fires that razed thousands of homes. The allegation was denied by the Defence Headquarters, which also debunked assertion that many bodies were buried in mass graves.

    “It was you, the security agents, that went into town the following day and burnt homes and killed people at will,” Shekau said.

    The military insisted that only 37 people, including 30 suspected Islamists, died in the Baga violence.

    Some seven minutes into the 12-minute video message, the screen splits, showing Shekau on the left with a group of unidentified women and children on the right.

    The Islamist leader claimed this group is being held hostage in retaliation for the wives and children of Boko Haram members detained by the military.

    Boko Haram has never before boasted about the kidnapping of women and children.

    “As long as we do not see our women and children, we will never release these women and children,” Shekau said.

    The group set out a similar condition for the release of seven members of a French family who were kidnapped in February in Cameroon near the Nigerian border. The Moulin-Fournier family were released last month.

    Before claiming the French abductions, Boko Haram had not widely been associated with kidnappings. Their attacks, which have killed hundreds since 2009, have included suicide blasts as well as coordinated gun and bomb assaults on the security forces and other symbols of authority.

    The recent attacks in the Northeast have raised concern about the increasingly brazen tactics used by the insurgents, who have said they are fighting to create an Islamic state in mostly Muslim northern Nigeria.

    In Bama, they stormed the commercial centre in a convoy of seven vehicles, launching coordinated pre-dawn attacks on the military, police and several government buildings.

    It was not immediately clear last night how the committee appointed to seek dialogue with the sect will react to its latest rejection of peace overtimes.

  • Current strategy to curb Boko Haram not working, says Agbakoba

    Former President of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), Mr Oliseh Agbakoba (SAN), yesterday urged the Federal Government to overhaul its national security strategy on Boko Haram insurgency.

    The senior lawyer noted that the steps the government has taken so far have yielded no good result.

    Agbakoba, who addressed reporters in Lagos at an NBA workshop, advised the Jonathan administration to forget about constituting committees to address the issue.

    He said the spate of kidnapping and insurgency across the land was poverty-driven.

    According to him, the situation in the North is terrible because recruits of the Boko Haram sect have chosen Al-Queda’s offer over what the government is putting on the negotiation table.

    The former NBA president advised Jonathan to adopt the strategy used by his predecessor, the late President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua, who he said silently engaged insurgents to know who they were and what they wanted as well as their challenges

    He said: “The government should find alternatives to ensure that Boko Haram does not get free ammunitions, as the group seems to have accepted the offer by Al-Queda than that of government.”

    Agbakoba, who said insurgency across the country is largely an issue of poverty and how national institutions are reacting to it, added thyat the rule of law has little to do with it.

    He said: “The high level of unemployment is causing big problems in this country. Employment is a lot easier in the South than in the North. Then, remember that there is also a determined attempt by Boko Haram to cause chaos.

    “I think the government should review how it has been applying the amnesty provision. It is not about setting up committees; there is a lot more than is being done presently.

    “I don’t know if you are aware that Al-Queda has had a lot of difficulties operating in Afghanistan and Pakistan as a result of the American ‘boot on the ground’? The militias ran away to Yemen; they were chased out of Yemen into Egypt Algeria.

    “They bypassed Morocco because it is a soft Islam country. Then, they went across the Atlas Mountain and merged with the rebels and Tuaregs and found refuge in Mali. From Mali to northern Nigeria is very porous.

    “What has happened is that the unemployed persons in the North, who have been recruited by Boko Haram, find it easier taking Al-Queda’s cheap money. They have two choices – being settled by the Federal Government or the choice of Al-Queda – and they are choosing Al-Queda.

    “The rate of poverty in this country is alarming and we can only deal with it if we have responsible political leadership. So, we need to completely revamp our national security strategy as long as Boko Haram is concerned. The idea by America to bring in drones into the country, I think, will not be popular and may not be accepted politically by Nigerians…”

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • How Jonathan  can combat  security  crisis

    How Jonathan can combat security crisis

    Each passing day, security is getting worse. It is either people are kidnapped or security operatives are killed. In the face of it all, the government seems handicapped. Last month, 12 policemen were killed in Bayelsa State. Nine days ago, Boko Haram killed 22 policemen in Bama, Borno State. That same day, 23 policemen and State Security Service (SSS) officers were killed in an ambush in Nasarawa State. Should things be allowed to continue like this? No, say lawyers who spoke with Adebisi Onanuga and proffered the way out.

    IN the last few days, security has taken the turn for the worse. Killings and kidnappings are on the rise as hoodlums hold sway in different parts of the country. Security has virtually collapsed, as crimes seem to have become permanent fixture of daily life. The crimes are committed with impunity. If it is not robbery, which occurs daily in almost every part of the country, it is kidnapping which has spread to almost all the states, or maiming and killing of people, including security operatives by the Boko Haram in the North.

    Kidnapping which began in the Niger Delta, now occurs in other parts of the country because it has become lucrative. Unlike in the past when the victims are foreigners in the oil industry kidnapped by the Niger Delta militants in the fight to stop further degradation of their land by oil firms, today many are kidnapped for ransom running into millions of naira. Almost everybody is a potential victim. The rich, their wives, parents and children. Traditional rulers are not spared.

    The challenge this poses to the country is better understood considering the cases of eminent people, including traditional rulers that are being kidnapped.

    Sometimes, the victims are killed when the kidnappers’demands are not met or is late in coming. Others like former Deputy Governor Chudi Nwike was killed even after his family had paid a N5million ransom.

    Last Friday, Adedoyin, the wife of Justice Bode Rhodes-Vivour of the Supreme Court, her daughter and driver were kidnapped on the Lagos–Benin Road.

    Mrs. Rhodes-Vivour, a lawyer based in Lagos, and the others were travelling to Benin for her daughter’s marriage.

    On May 3, former Petroleum Minister Alhaji Shetima Alli Monguno, 92, was abducted by gunmen after the Jumat service in his mosque in Mafoni Maiduguri, Borno State. The nonagenarian was released after 72 hours, after the family reportedly paid a N20million ransom. But Governor Kashim Shetima claimed that no ransom was paid.

    In April, last year, Prof Kamene Okonjo, mother of the Finance Minister, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, was kidnapped by gunmen from the palace of her husband in Ogwashi-Uku, Delta State. While she was lucky to be alive, 72-year-old Mrs. Regina Obi Dalty, a resident of Ogwashi-Uku, also allegedly kidnapped in the Delta community by the same gang, was murdered  because the ransom paid on her was considered paltry. The gang was said to have demanded N10 million for her release, but got N2 million.

    On the other hand, the Boko Haram insurgence, which first started in the northern part of the country like an ideological war against western behavioural pattern, and the imposition of strict Sharia Law, has taken fearful dimensions. The focus of their criminal activities is now on Christian communities and other persons who are not of northern extraction as the sect has shifted from their initial ideology.

    Thousands of Nigerians have been killed, and properties worth billions of naira destroyed since the Boko Haram crisis began.

    Today, Boko Haram appears to be more organised and dangerous as it is seen to be always ahead of security agencies in the execution of its war against innocent Nigerians. The group has continued with its dastardly acts, unleashing terror on Nigerians, particularly Christians, and government establishments. It was believed that their activities will decline following the decision of the government to dialogue and grant them amnesty. The reactions which their continuing insurgence on the people has however casts doubts on the effectiveness of government and security agencies in the country to curb or totally stop their activities.

    What all these developments have shown is that the state governments do not have the capacity to protect their people.

    To make the matter worse, the police supposed to be a mediator between individuals and groups in the society, ensure peace and security for the community in time of crisis like this, have also displayed that they lack the capacity to cope with the developments around them. Rather, the police have become the target of attacks by the sect.

    Four policemen among a security team abducted eight days ago are still being held by the Ombatse militia in Nasarawa State. The police confirmed that 23 of their men and those of the State Security Service (SSS) were killed in the ambush that took place at Alakyo Village in the state. The Inspector- General of Police, Muhammed Abubakar, who visited the place, said the police would engage peaceful methods to set the hostages free. But eight days after, they are still in captivity.

    On April 29, gunmen attacked Ringim Divisional Police Headquarters and the residence of the former Inspector-General of Police, Hafiz Ringim, in Jigawa State, At the end of the attack that lasted about five hours, three policemen and two guards in a bank were killed.

    In January last year, 186 were killed in Kano in a coordinated attack by Boko Haram. Also in Baga, in Kukuwa Local Government area of Borno State, 185 were reported dead in a fighting between the Joint Task Force and the Boko Haram sect, most of them women and children while about 2,000 houses were burnt in the fight which occurred between Friday, April 20 and Saturday, April 21, 2013. The United States of America, the United Nations, the elders from the North and the National Assembly are among those who condemned the killings of innocent Nigerians while President Goodluck Jonathan ordered a probe into the blood bath.

    In March 18, 2013, 25 people died while many others were injured when suicide bombers believed to be members of the Boko Haram struck and bombed a Lagos bound luxury bus at the new road motor park in Sabon Gari area of Kano predominantly occupied by non-indigenes.

    For two days, gun men raided four communities in Kaura Local Government Area in Southern Kaduna and left 20 people dead and many injured. The gun men believed to be nomadic herdsmen invaded the villages on Saturday night of March 30, 2013 and continued the raid on Zilang, Taliki, Zangkan and Mafang hill top till early Sunday morning of March 31, 2013.

    The failure of the security system in Nigeria to make use of its intelligence network to penetrate the network of the Boko Haram and access intelligence information from the Nigerian communities which could be used to prevent attacks, pose a lot of threat to the peace and security of the nation and is indicative of the failure of the state structure.

    No doubt, the level insecurity is alarming and and in the face of all these, the government which has the constitutional responsibility and the security apparatus to protect the lives and property of the people is displaying its inadequacies in combating the various crimes and acts of terrorism ravaging the country. Terrorism seems to be gaining grounds in the country today because the government whose responsibility it is to protect the lives and properties of her citizens, appeared to have failed also in this area of its responsibility.

    Does the President lack the capacity to fight insecurity? Or is it that our security apparatuses are inadequate to combat the menace? These are the questions that have been agitating the minds of many Nigerians in view of recent attacks on the police by the sect and other groups with the police suffering high casualties. Lawyers expressed their worries over the matter and proffered solutions within the confines of the laws.

    To Mr Kemi Pinheiro (SAN), the primary obligation of the government under the Constitution is the guarantee of security of  lives and property.

    “Without a doubt some northern parts of Nigeria are under siege. It is even more worrisome that the security agencies are themselves the target of attacks! The Presidents failure to declare  a state of emergency in some of these areas is in my humble an abdication of his constitutional responsibility!

    “The political class including the opposition parties  have not helped matters too ! Rather than  present a very unified front with the ruling party  in the face of this onslaught against the Nigerian state, they are  playing primordial politics along party lines as if these deaths are meaningless to them !  It is very disheartening indeed!”, he said.

    Prince Segun Ajibola (SAN) said he could not recall when in Nigeria, the life and well being of the citizens have been  so threatened and overwhelmed by fear and insecurity. He noted that the situation has almost completely gone out of control. He said that the  recent killing of a number of policemen, soldiers and other security agents is clear  and additional evidence that Mayhem has  now become the order of the day and that the matter has gone beyond a  mere legislative approach, or local issue, the problem has a cross border flavour ,which has clearly defiled all local efforts to deal with it.

    “ In my humble opinion, it calls for a security strategy of  a highly technical and sophisticated form, designed by experts in this field were ever in the world they can be found. Another idea is to seriously follow up and intensify the peace efforts, in whatever name described, amnesty etc. and embark on  a massive , aggressive, poverty alleviation and educational projects ,targeted at specific problem areas as a start ,and  then  gradually widen the scope to major parts of the country.

    “The statute books are littered with all sorts of laws to discourage this kind of nefarious and heinous acts, but they are helpless in the face of a weak or ineffective machinery to enforce them. Unfortunately laws don’t have self enforcement mechanisms. This is largely the responsibility of security and law enforcement agents, whose efficiency is  sadly facing monumental challenges. They more than deserve our support and prayers especially at this crucial times, if they fail, I am afraid we have all failed”, he said.

    Former Publicity Secretary, Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), Ikeja Branch, Mr Samson Omodara, said high insecurity would end when there is equitable wealth distribution.

    “The high level of insecurity all has to do with the imbalance in wealth distribution, bad governance and moral decadence. “Our leaders must wake up or be ready to be woken by revolution,” he said.

    President, Coalition of Lawyers for Good Governance (CLGG), Mr Joe Nwokedi, believes improving the country’s security situation would require more patriotism and the input of all Nigerians.

    He said: “The rate of insecurity going on in the country is quite alarming. The recurring phenomenon of bloodshed and wanton destruction of lives and properties has made our veins unshakable.

    “The most worrisome aspect of it is that it is becoming uncontrollable and magnifying by the day.

    “The solution to the problem is patriotism. We have to go back to our roots. It seems that we no longer value this entity called Nigeria.

    “The values that our founding fathers pursued with vigour and strength have been eroded.

    “Even our president is not patriotic enough; if not how can he pardon a man who embezzled our funds and was convicted, simply because he hail from his state?

    “Our citizens are not happy with our country; our security personnel are not patriotic, neither are our fellow country men and women.

    “There is anger in the land. It is time we pursued ideals that bind rather than divide us.

    “Security Chiefs and Personnel should be more committed to their work. Let us see security as  everybody’s duty.”

    Said Ike Ofuokwu, “ If the wife and daughter of a Justice of the Supreme Court can be so easily kidnapped, then it is no longer a case of insecurity but outright anarchy.This criminality has tarried for so long that it has overwhelmed our security agencies who are now more of the victims of this impunity. Isn’t it strange that up till this day no security personnel has taken responsibility or even resigned from his or her position. Even till date none of the big wigs implicated in this shame has been tried and convicted. Instead, they are still seated in supposedly hallowed chambers making ‘laws’.

    “The government has been insincere in tackling this issue just due to their selfish and personal political interest for 2015. We are equally not deceived with their talk of amnesty for Boko Haram. Amnesty with what is happening in the Niger Delta is the biggest conduit pipe for looting and siphoning public fund.

    “A government that cannot tackle unemployment and is not able to create jobs for able bodied young men has automatically created insecurity and anarchy. The sophistication in which these crimes are executed is a pointer that educated and technology compliant young men are unemployed,” he said.

    Chairman of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), Lagos, Mr Taiwo Taiwo, described the kidnapping of Mrs. Adedoyin Rhode-Vivour and daughter as a sad development, adding that it is another dimension to the security challenges of the country. “If the wife of the Justice of the Supreme Court could just be kidnapped like that, then it portends danger for all of us in this country.”

    The National leader of the Congress for Progressive Change(CPC), Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, on Saturday declared that the way President Goodluck Jonathan has been handling security challenges in the country has shown that his government lacks the capacity to deal with the crisis.

    Buhari noted that violence is pushing the country towards anarchy hence the need for well-meaning Nigerians to step in immediately to save the country from going under.

    “Anarchy is knocking on the door of many sections of this country and the Federal Government has not demonstrated that it has the good sense to understand what is going on or the competence to check it.

    “The nation is hopelessly adrift. But if we are to survive, this vicious circle of violence that has engulfed this nation must be brought to an end; and we implore the national Assembly to take the lead in this quest for peace”, Gen. Buhari added.

    The Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), in a statement in Lagos by its National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, asked President Goodluck Jonathan to shelve the plan, if he has any, to impose a state of emergency on some of the northern states worst hit by the Boko Haram crisis. The party said any such move can only be aimed at giving an undue advantage to the PDP instead of helping to end the crisis.

    “Imposing a state of emergency on the states that have been mentioned, like Borno, Yobe and Nasarawa states will amount to shifting responsibility and unduly victimising the governors of those states, who have done perhaps more than the President, in dealing with the crisis, even though they are not in charge of any security apparatus”, the party said.

  • Granting Boko Haram amnesty not justifiable, says cleric

    The Catholic Bishop of Kwara State, Dr Ayo-Maria Atoyebi, yesterday said the Federal Government’s plan to grant amnesty to the Boko Haram sect is unjustifiable.

    Atoyebi addressed reporters in Ilorin, the state capital, as part of activities marking the 47th World Communications Day.

    The cleric noted that “Boko Haram members have not told us what …Nigerians have done to them that warrants the killing of innocent people”.

    He said the Niger Delta residents complained about their means of livelihood being devastated as a result of oil exploration.

    The cleric said Boko Haram is a faceless group, which cannot be identified, adding that even when its members were called for a dialogue, “they reject same without reasons”.

    He attributed the problems in the country to the greed of those in authority as well as the followers.

    Also, the Secretary-General of the Nigerian Supreme Council for Islamic Affaira (NSCIA), Prof Ishaq Oloyede, has urged the Federal Government to proffer solutions to the current security challenges in the country.

    Oloyede, a former Vice-Chancellor of the University of Ilorin (UNILORIN), said: “I pray that God will strengthen the government to be able to face the challenges. It is the responsibility of the government to tackle insecurity.”

    On his recent appointment as the NSCIA scribe, the former university administrator said: “You expect a more vibrant Islamic community that is much more involved in what goes on in the country. Of course, there will be more rapport between Christians and Muslims. I’m a Professor of Islamic Studies and the first rule is that you must love your neighbour as much as you love yourself.”

  • Bama killings: 321 people displaced, Bama remains a ghost town

    About 321 presons have been displaced by the Tuesday attack by suspected Boko Haram members on Bama town, according to the police Area Commander ASP Sagir Abubakar.

    He disclosed this yesterday while receiving condolences and relief materials from a delegation from National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) led by the Director of Administration and Supply Dr. Zanna Mohammed.

    Abubakar added that the police casualties during the attack has risen to 26, 25 policemen and a police woman and that two civilian women were also killed by the insurgents at its barrack. He said two women, both wives of police officers added to the number of the police lost, adding that an eight-year-old daughter of one police officer was still missing.

    Abubakar disclosed that the DPO of the area who was declared missing during the wake of the attack has been found dead. He said he was killed during the mayhem by the insurgents and his corpse dumped by the riverside.

    He said: “The DPO, DSP Lawrence Ek,o was found on Thursday along the river bank after he was killed by the insurgents.”

    In the meantime, residents of Bama have remained indoors as the town still remains a ghost of itself four days after the attack.

    Markets remained close and shops in the residential areas are not even opened, making it difficult for people of the town to feed themselves.

    The military, however, said that the decision of the residents to remain indoors is self-imposed as no dusk to dawn curfew is in place in the town.

    Commanding Officer of the 202 Tank Battalion, Lt. Col. Adamu Laka said it was unfortunate that the people of the town have imposed on themselves a total curfew.

    He said when the situation broke out on Tuesday, the military imposed a curfew on the town, but movement was allowed between 9am and 3pm to allow everyone to make purchases and have a feel of freedom,adding that ” it was, however, unfortunate that the locals are still afraid of being attacked and have decided to stay indoors.”

  • Soyinka, Sowore task FG on Boko Haram insurgency

    LITERARY Icon, Prof Wole Soyinka, has called on the Nigerian government to go back to the very beginning of the indoctrination of Boko-Haram sect members in schools if they intend to solve the threat and killings by the group.

    He made the call while speaking on AJStream, a programme on AIJazeera cable network on Wednesday, monitored in Benin.

    The Nobel Laureate said Boko Haram is a local movement, adding that it is part of an international problem that needs to be checked. “Boko Haram claim they are fighting for their religion. We have knowledge and pronouncement of other muslims that they are not true Muslims. That what they are doing is not approved by any teaching in Islamic religion.”

    Meanwhile, founder of Sahara Reporter, Omoyele Sowore, has attributed the problem of insecurity, killings and destruction of lives and property to bad governance by Nigerian leaders.

    He made the disclosure while answering questions at AJStream, a programme on Aljazeera cable network on the operations of Boko Haram in the northern part of the country.