Tag: boko haram

  • Army denies report of missing soldiers

    …says troops kill 22 terrorists

     

    The Nigerian Army said on Monday that about 22 Boko Haram members were killed during an attack on troops by the insurgents in Bama, Borno State.

    The Army said this was contrary to reports in the media that some soldiers were missing after attacks on them by Boko Haram terrorists.

    The spokesperson for the army, Brig Gen Texas Chukwu, in a statement urged the public to disregard the report in the media regarding the missing soldiers.

    He maintained that only an officer and a soldier were injured during the encounter.

    Read Also:Court convicts 113 Boko Haram members

    Brig Gen Chukwu said: “The attention of the Nigerian Army has been drawn to news making the round alleging attack on soldiers and capturing of military vehicles by Boko Haram in Bama Local Government Area of Borno State.

    “The Nigerian Army wishes to state categorically that the report is not only untrue but misleading as the said report is blown out of proportion by the media.

    “Contrary to the report, the Nigerian Army wishes to put the record straight on the issue and assure members of the public particularly residents of the North East to disregard the report as their safety is guaranteed.

    “The Nigeria Army wishes to state that there was an attempted attack on troops at Kwakwa and Chingori communities in Bama area of Borno State by suspected Boko Haram Terrorists as a result of difficult terrain where our vehicles bugged down.

    “The terrorists also attempted to cart away troops operational vehicles, but were successfully repelled by our gallant troops with the support of the Nigerian Air Force.

    “About 22 members of Boko Haram terrorists were neutralised while several others escaped with gunshot wounds. Efforts are being intensified by the troops to get the fleeing members of the Boko Haram terrorists.

    “Unfortunately, one officer and a soldier sustained injuries and are currently receiving medical attention at the military medical facility.

    “While the Nigerian Army would not join issues with the media, certain facts must be reported with caution particularly now that numerous successes have been recorded by the troops in the fight against insurgency.

    “Members of the public are hereby advised to disregard the report and go about their legitimate businesses as the Nigerian Army is on top of the situation.

    “It is my well-thought-out opinion that in future, media practitioners should endeavour to verify facts from the appropriate military authority before rushing to the press.”

     

  • Boko Haram attacks military base in Borno/ Yobe village

    An unknown number of soldiers have been allegedly killed in a on Saturday night in a Boko Haram attack on a military base in Borno/Yobe villages.
    The insurgents according to eyewitness took the soldiers unawares and lunched a dastardly attack on them.
    Jilli is a boarder  settlement   from Futchimiram ward in Borno State  about 60 kilometers away from Geidam Local Government of Yobe State .
    The Nation checks revealed that the  base was about 800 troops strong before it was attacked.
     A security  source revealed that many casualties were recorded by the military adding  that some dislodged soldiers were sighted trying to reach Gaidam town this morning.
    The military are yet to comment on the attack as no official statement has been released.
  • Killings: Arrest and prosecute killer politicians, Lamido tells Buhari

    Former Governor of Jigawa state and presidential aspirant under the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), Alhaji Sule Lamido has challenged President Muhammadu Buhari to name the politicians behind the incessant killings in the country and bring them to justice.

    Lamido was reacting to claims by the Presidency that it has the list of names of politicians who are responsible for the killings of innocent Nigerians.

    “President Buhari said ‘I know those politicians, who are sponsoring these killings,’ he said so, as the Commander-In-Chief. Now, have they been arrested? Who are they? Name them. People are dying every day, and he knows the killers and they have not been arrested. You press men, please ask him (Buhari) who they are, he should arrest them,” Lamido stated.

    The presidential aspirant, who spoke to journalists in his Kano residence, insisted that the ruling All Progressive Congress (APC) government has failed to deliver on its three-point agenda of security, economy and fighting corruption.

    Lamido who said he has started consultation with PDP stakeholders across the country ahead of the convention regretted that Nigerians have suffered a lot under APC government.

    According to him, “on security, you see, before it was Boko Haram, it has now gone beyond Boko Haram. It is now inter-tribal. It is between Fulani and Fulanis; it is between Hausa and Hausas, between Igbos and Igbos. In Ebonyi it is there, in Zamfara it is there and in Sokoto, it is there.

    “So, you see, today, we are under siege. It means all they key security chiefs appointed by this government have failed to deliver. Nigerians are now sleepless, they are watching, they have so many things in their minds—whether to go for what they know is safety, security and prosperity or to go for this culture of violence which is now defiling Nigeria as a country.”

    Lamido further stated that, “the three factors that they used during their campaign—economy, security and fighting corruption are all zero.

    “How on earth can Buhari go to Danjuma Goje’s house to beg him—Goje who has been arraigned in court! And Buhari preferred to go to him, by that, the Judge should be very very careful, because it means they cannot convict Goje.

    “If Oshiomole after all these noise and ranting will go to Saraki and Tambuwal and beg them, after calling PDP thieves and what have you, which means their fight against corruption is defeated.”

    Speaking on the just concluded Ekiti governorship election, Lamido said, “the election process in Ekiti was heavily militarized; and I know it shouldn’t be a surprise because we are being led by a former military General who was also a former military Head of State, who was known for arresting political leaders.

    “Number two, you see, he (Buhari) only says politicians are this, politicians are that, which means he is not a politician.

    “So, I think the election in Ekiti, to me, if it is the wish of the people that is announced as the result, I have no quarrels with it. I hope, also, that this is not the kind of thing we are going to experience in 2019 elections because it will spell doom for democracy.

    “You see, even before the election, there was this acrimony, the atmosphere was very tensed. You see, sending 30, 000 police men in Ekiti for a governorship election is very worrisome.

    “From what I heard, they said they sent 30, 000 policemen, we don’t know the number of other security agencies and para-military. If in 2019, they are sending 30, 000 police men to conduct elections in each state, that means 30, 000 times 36, including Abuja—this is very curious.

    “If this was how that election was conducted, that means they instilled fear in the people. To me, the election has come and gone, it has been conducted and the winner has been declared, I certainly hope that it is the wish of the people that was declared. Let it be the wish of the people that is being declared, simple.”

    He expressed confidence that PDP will reclaim power in 2019, adding that PDP has learnt from its past mistakes.

  • Boko Haram: Presidential committee develops orphanages for 56,000

    Community based orphanages are now emerging in the North-East at the instance of the Presidential Committee on Northeast Initiative (PCNI) to cater for children orphaned by Boko Haram insurgency in the region.

    56,000 of such children are targeted by  the project, according to the  Vice Chairman of PCNI, Alhaji Tijjani Tumsa.

    Tumsa said at a  media roundtable in Maiduguri that the move was imperative to ensure protection, survival, guaranteed child’s education and health needs and improvement of their social wellbeing.

    He explained that the committee was working in collaboration with humanitarian actors to build the capacity of Community Based Organisations (CBOs) to enable them take charge of existing orphanages in the region.

    He said: “What we are thinking of is to have orphanages that are run by local people who are desirous of taking up the orphans,” he said.

    He added: “We will like to give people the opportunity to also participate in the process. PCNI is willing to promote it through organisations that are willing to also participate in it, as sustainability is key.

    “In the last count, we have 56,000 orphans on record and that is not a small number, it is larger than most armies in West Africa, and it is a lot of process to cater for them.

    “We want to have a community based orphanages run by the local people and to be sustained by tle themselves,’’

    Tumsa also said  the committee was providing food and non-food items intervention to existing orphanages in Borno.

    According to him, the committee had supplied drugs and medical equipment, food and non-food items to the Special Orphans Learning Centre, Maiduguri, established by the North East Children’s Fund, an NGO.

    “Statistics by the Borno Government indicate  that more than 53,000 children were orphaned and 50,000 women widowed by the insurgency in the state.

    “The state government also embarked on 22 mega school projects to enroll the affected children, while some organisations and individuals also offered health and education support to the orphans in the state,’’ Tumsa said.

  • Boko Haram: Insurgents didn’t hoist flag in North east, cyber-terrorists out to frustrate relocation of IDPs back home – SHAC

    The Save Humanity Advocacy Centre, SHAC, has described the report in a section of the media alleging that some elements of the Boko Haram sect are active and currently hoisting their flags in some parts of north eastern region of Nigeria as fake, ridiculous and totally unacceptable in the face of efforts by stakeholders to relocate IDPs back to their abodes.

    The group said the false alarm is an attempt at frustrating the ongoing efforts to relocate and rehabilitate the Internally Displaced Persons back to their homes.

    SHAC said the information was not true as it remains a figment of the imagination of those merchants of death and profiteers of crisis who have vowed to see to the destabilisation of this country.

    Lawrence Audu, Director of Communications, SHAC, at a press conference on Sunday and obtained by our reporter, said the false report was capable of putting the life of humanitarian workers in danger and thwarting efforts at relocating internally displaced persons back home.

    The group therefore called on Nigerians and the international collaborators to disregard such heinous and unbridled stories being churned out by Boko Haram cyber thugs to discourage the Federal Government and the Nigerian people about seeing to the final end of Boko Haram in Nigeria .

    He said, “For the records, the Nigerian Military has won the war and no Jupiter can reverse the successes achieved even if they are happy or not. Efforts are ongoing and credible humanitarian organisations have continued to work with the IDPs of which many have returned home.

    “At this juncture, we call on all Nigerians to always verify the sources of their information before rebroadcasting because statistics show that fake news and rumours have been largely responsible for the escalation of crisis in most parts of the country.

    “Nigerians must be aware that one major component of terror is information flow. Terrorists like ISIS, Boko Haram, Al Shabab and their collaborators create dreadful images to instill fear followed by hate which travels like wild fire. Since negative news apeals more to the human senses, they are shared without proper verification to it’s authenticity.

    “Nigerians must desist from such acts since it helps the author achieve their aims very cheaply while those sharing achieve nothing but a society divided against itself along ethnic and religious lines.”

  • Corruption threatens development in Africa – NLC

    The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) said on Wednesday that the high incidence of corruption in Africa represents a direct threat to its progress, stability and well-being which must be confronted head on if the continent must progress.

    In a statement to mark the 2018 African anti-corruption day and signed by the President, Comrade Ayuba Wabba, the Congress said corruption remain the most pressing governance and development challenge confronting African nations today.

    The congress said that corruption in several ways has continues to arrest growth and development, creating in the process situations of unacceptable unemployment, infrastructural decay, collapsed energy systems and capacities, massive production deficits and near absence of social justice”

    He said “Corruption has also created situations of strife or exacerbated them as was the case with the Boko Haram insurgency under the previous government.”

    Wabba said: “We would want to identify and collaborate with the AU as it marks this year’s anti-corruption day. In our view, corruption remains the most pressing governance and development challenge confronting Africa today, Nigeria inclusive.

    Read Also: NLC rejects 500 per cent tariff on local alcohol

    “Corruption in several ways continues to arrest growth and development, creating in the process situations of unacceptable unemployment, infrastructural decay, collapsed energy systems and capacities, massive production deficits and near absence of social justice.

    “Corruption has also created situations of strife or exacerbated them as was the case with the Boko Haram insurgency under the previous government. Thus, it is clearly evident that the high incidence of corruption in Africa represents a direct threat to its progress, stability and well-being.

    “We find it heartening that AU has not only recognised the enormity of this problem but has set up a day as a perpetual reminder and symbol of the fight against corruption.

    “On our part, we believe corruption is a monster that must be confronted head-long if Africa is to make any headway or be taken seriously in the comity of nations.

    “For us this fight, however, must go beyond the symbolism of marking the day to demonstrable commitment by leaders of African countries and other office holders that corruption is a reprehensible crime that should be stamped out.

    “In furtherance of this, we have held and will continue to hold anti-corruption and good governance rallies. We have held sensitisation workshops just as we have called for special anti-corruption courts and imposition of capital punishment for serious corruption cases.

    “The Thabo Mbeki report on Illicit Financial Flows in Africa clearly revealed that humunguous corruption goes on in both public and private sector-settings.

    “This underscores not just the severity of the incidence of corruption; it presents a picture of hopelessness of the African condition. But we need not despair if we are determined or committed to deal with corruption.

    “It is on this note that we at the Nigeria Labour Congress enjoin all those who want  to see a new Africa to rise with one accord and fight corruption today…. African leaders, multi-nationals, Western Financial Institutions, all of us”.

  • Court convicts 113 Boko Haram fighters

    The special court set up by the Federal Government to try detained Boko Haram suspects determined over 100 cases this week.

    In the cases determined on Monday and Tuesday at a military formation in New Bussa, Niger State, 113 persons were convicted for their involvement in the activities of the terror group.

    The convicted persons were sentenced to various jail terms by three judges drawn from Federal High Court in the state.

    111 suspects were set free because prima facie case was established against them.

    They were recommended for rehabilitation before release.

    All the cases involved defendants who could only speak either Hausa or Kanuri, thereby requiring the assistance of translators.

    The ages of the suspects varied, the lowest being a 16 year-old Saudatu Zarhadeen, who was arrested at the age of 13 years by security agents who had gone to their home to arrest her husband, a suspected Boko Haram leader, but picked her in his absence.

    The oldest was 73 years old Mamman Lawan, who was among five men convicted for concealing information about the activities of Boko Haram and offered members of the sect foods and other items.

    Lawan and four others – Modu Bulama (40) Mallam Dupochi (50), Mallam Ali Mami (63) and Musa Mohammed Dawa (60) – were sentenced to three years on each of the four-count charge for which they were arraigned.

     

  • Boko Haram: UNICEF hails release of 180 children from custody

    United Nations Children Fund (UNICEF) has applauded the release of 183 children from the custody of the Nigerian Armed Forces in Maiduguri, Borno State.

    The released children, aged 7-18, were cleared of ties with the Boko Haram insurgents.

    The UNICEF Representative in Nigeria, Mohamed Fall, in a statement on Monday, said assured Borno State of the agency’s assistance.

    He said: “These eight girls and 175 boys are first and foremost victims of the ongoing conflict and their release is an important step on their long road to recovery.

    “We will be working with the Borno State Ministry of Women Affairs and Social Development and partners to provide the children with all the assistance they need. I also want to commend the action taken by the military and the authorities. It demonstrates a clear commitment to better protect children affected by the conflict.”

    “Having been held in administrative custody, the children will receive medical attention and psychosocial support before the process of reuniting them with their families and reintegrating them into society begins.”

  • Troops rescue girl abandoned by Boko Haram in Borno

    Troops in Borno State have rescued a female child abandoned by fleeing Boko Haram terrorists, the army spokesman, Brig.-Gen Texas Chukwu, said on Monday.

    Chukwu said in a statement the troops on a “clearance operation” also recovered three AK47 riffle magazines, one FN rifle magazine and one suicide vest from the terrorists.

    “Other items recovered from the insurgents include one dry cell battery, one 36 hand grenade, two nine volt batteries, one pressure plate, wire for making Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs) and two grinding machines,” he stated.

    NAN

     

  • Lt general Tukur Yusufu Buratai : The giant strides of the Nigerian Army Chief

    The Politics of The War on Terror; A Critical look into the challenges on the field and the dynamics of political contends.

    Since the beginning of the war on Terror of the Boko Haram kind in Nigeria effectively in year 2011/2012, never has the country faced more than two different kinds of internal conflicts and wars, as we do now.

    That Nigeria has won the war of Terror of the Boko Haram kind, is a well established fact, thanks to President Muhammadu Buhari and in large parts, to the Chief of Army Staff, Lt General Tukur Yusufu Buratai, the Army Chief who has for the past three years been saddled with a three pronged war, in which he has made ground-breaking records of successes with Boko Haram and modest progress in tackling the Herdsmen Farmers clashes… And the third one, which is perhaps the most trying one, the politically sponsored killings, mostly in the Middle-Belt region.

    We are in a different kind of war.

    The type of war that needs the discipline which makes the soldiers of a well trained army reliable in battle.

    Victory in our peculiar kind of war, is not to be gained by harsh or tyrannical treatment.

    On the contrary, such treatment is far more likely to destroy the polity, than to make a country stronger and better.

    It is only possible to impart instruction and give commands in such a manner and such a tone of voice as to inspire in the soldier no feeling but an intense desire to obey, while at the same time inspire confidence in the  Nigerian people, tired of the killings all over the country.

    To not handle the present challenges with tact, and embark on indiscriminate engagement tactics, in such opposite manner to mostly civil clashes, will only attract strong resentment and a desire to invite anarchy.

    Nigeria at this very moment, is in need of superior handling and very careful stratagem, the type that can ensure a containment, rather than an escalation.

    The one mode or the other in dealing with uprisings and conflicts in which the military is drafted in, must be weighed carefully, lest the matter be mishandled.

    Here in this kind of a different war, information gathering, espionage, intelligence deployment, become the first line of tools that spring from a corresponding spirit in the breast of the Commander, rather than the conventional armor, bullets and guns.

    The Commander, who feels the respect which is due to tactics, stratagems cannot fail to inspire in his men, the respect for himself — And here is where the Chief of Army Staff, Lt General Buratai must be commended in the way he has been handling a totally unconventional war in which communal communication, interactions, community service, community development, youth elevation, provision of amenities to the locals and prompt response have been the hallmark of the new and different approach to handling this peculiar war within, in which the Army has found itself.

    The Nigerian crucible of war and battle is a challenge we can only imagine. We are unfortunate to live in a country where war within is a constant element, only made real by saboteurs, ethnic bigots, politics, politicians, who have or currently do serve in government.

    We can be only grateful to the men and the women who serve in the military, especially in the Nigerian Army.

    We honor the men and women who have died serving in the Nigerian Army, since this war in terror and allied issues began like seven years ago.

    If there is not the war, you don’t get the great General; if there is not a great challenge, you don’t get a great statesman. And this is where General Buratai has distinguished himself.

    Let us consider these few instances..

    Not too long ago, and just a little bit of time before the General T Y Danjuma allegation of complicity against the Nigerian Army, the Chief of Army Staff, Lt General Buratai donated a well equipped clinic and a borehole to a community in Taraba State, same state of Taraba that General Danjuma comes from…

    Same General Buratai sought for and got collaboration between the Nigerian Army and Taraba native institutions, with a view to having an effective intelligence and information systems in place to enable the Army deal with the communal issues, clashes and  killings that have been reported in the state.

    And even after General Danjuma’s allegations, the Nigerian Army under General Buratai immediately  set up a high panel of enquiry to look into the allegations of General Danjuma’s, and also promised to make the findings, public.

    And in Benue, the controversial place where the strife and clashes are loudest, General Buratai offered five Benue youths automatic recruitment, which he has since carried out.

    In Kaduna, General Buratai gave his troops, three weeks to flush out the bandits responsible for a number of killings in the Southern Kaduna area of the state, and the troops responded with a resounding success.

    Setting a good example is critical to the success of this kind of war within in which the army is giving back to the society, moral, infrastructural, and communal support of various kinds.

    If it is about solving conflicts and finding solutions to communal clashes, farmer/herdsmen clashes, trying to improve the culture of inclusiveness as a panacea to ending such wars, it’s the right place to start.

    These gestures by Lt General Tukur Yusufu   Buratai can only help a troubled nation think more about an Army with a human face, rather than the image of a militarized country in a Democracy.

    Perseverance through adversity is key to succeeding in battle, and in these conflicts that also have political undertones.

    The nation is now getting to know that many of the conflicts in Benue and in Plateau states, are as a result of the intervention of unscrupulous politicians in these states….

    For instance, the Armed Forces have established that in the three local governments affected in the recent incident that claimed many lives in Benue state, a Councillor in Fidi Local government council in Markudi has been apprehended with 7 others who have subsequently made confessional statements to the authorities concerning their roles in the carnage that involved the loss of many lives… Assault weapons and many rounds of bullets were also recovered from them.

    As army, the troops, the Chief of Army Staff, know so well, it’s the ability to push forward, unraveling the real Killers that matters most, whilst also acknowledging the protracted issues of farmers and herder clashes.

    For a country that is hurting and overwhelmed by the wanton killings, there will be emotional reactions and deserving finger pointing at suspected herders for almost all the deaths recorded in the troubled states of the Middle Belt zone.

    Yet, there must be caution, so as not to escalate the tension further, by aggravating the already tensed situation.

    It is only those who have neither fired a shot nor heard the shrieks and groans of the wounded who cry aloud for blood, more vengeance, more desolation…without bothering to know the facts, without working on the vital attention to intelligence gathering.

    Since the war on terror began, just as it is to be found in such situations all over the globe, other criminally intended groups with opportunistic tendencies, have also launched their own activities using the cover of terror to hide their identity and their intent.

    And as the general elections of 2019 draws near, criminally inclined politicians too, have joined the fray to gain political traction so as to thrive in such confusion.

    These are the challenges facing the Chief of Army Staff, Lt General Tukur Yusufu  Buratai as a True leader of men at a very difficult period in our nation’s history.

    He has a vision for the Army, which is to have a Professionally Responsive Nigerian Army in the Discharge of its Constitutional Roles…These were in his own words.

    His present efforts are geared towards ensuring a safer environment for development and socio-economic activities to thrive in the country.

    These are trying times in which the Armed Forces must ensure that they conduct themselves professionally and respond adequately to threats against our nation in accordance with our constitutional roles. The rest of us must therefore respond by having implicit confidence in our Armed Forces as they tackle our myriad security issues.

    The rest of us must grow our confidence levels to stand with our Armed Forces in this war against all sundry wars. We must develop the courage to grow the Trust and to accept the tough decisions that go with overcoming our security challenges, including the courage to speak for our Armed Forces in their various efforts to rid our nation of the enemies to our security.

    We also must have the compassion to listen to the findings of security personnel, as most times the usual narratives may not be exactly representing the truth on the ground.

    A nation does not set out to be a great nation by fiat, but becomes one by the quality of the actions of its citizenry and the integrity of the people at various leadership roles.

    To make sure the Army does not become entangled with politics, thereby losing the focus, the goal and the intent to keep the Army away from politics, partisan and otherwise, Lt General Buratai gave such an order while speaking at the Chief of Army Staff 1st Quarter Conference in Abuja, that GOCs, Brigade Commandeers and other officers interested in politics and romancing with politicians, must resign from service, warning that to have such a mind of being partisan will come will profound consequences…. And many times since that moment of his initial warning, he continues to reaffirm his stand on the need for men of the Nigerian Army, to remain apolitical, especially as Nigeria approaches the  election year.

    He warned, “Let me state emphatically here that the unity and integrity of Nigeria lies on the military and the Nigerian Army in particular. Therefore, any act inimical to the unity and integrity of this country by personnel of the Nigerian Army will be decisively dealt with.”

    He further said, “You are all enjoined to continue to remind officers and soldiers under your command to remain non-partisan and be guided by the stipulated code of conduct and rules of engagement in the discharge of their duties particularly in the coming 2019 General Elections. Furthermore, Nigerian Army personnel in any capacity who receives any form of inducement from politicians, public or private entities, knowingly or unknowingly will be severely punished. Both the giver and taker of such inducement will be investigated and appropriately sanctioned”

    The advocacy of the Chief of Army Staff, to his men to shun politics and for soldiers to restrain themselves from any act of political, religious or ethnic patronisation, must be seen as prescient in the wake of allegations of complicity that followed, and Buratai’s unique leadership traits must be seen as foreseeing the possibility of such allegations when none of such had ever been made.

    He had said any of such practices would attract severe consequences and that was exactly what happened when 38 officers were retired for various acts deemed to be inimical to the goals and aspirations of the Army in tackling all the various acts of insurgencies, all around the country.

    When General Tukur Yusufu  Buratai, flagged-off the two Battalion Forward Operation Base at the troubled Birnin-Gwari area of Kaduna State, a while ago, he charged the soldiers to get the killers in the troubled area within three weeks, and after three weeks about 22 of such Killers had been rounded up. Such is the seriousness the Chief of Army Staff has attached to the security situations that the country has been facing in recent times..

    Here is a man who has demanded a resounding success story from his men, and such has been the repose of trust that has led to the massive response of successes recorded so far.

    The Army chief told the soldiers not to adopt the defensive approach but rather, an offensive one.

    He said since the battle has been brought to them they must take it back and crush them wherever they are within the forest.

    “The killings must stop, the wanton destructions of properties must stop, all over the country”, he said at the time. Such is the belief and assurance that the security forces will finally bring the criminals to their knees…

    At this juncture, accolades must be duly poured on the President and on the National Assembly for facilitating the release of funds needed to tackle all the security challenges facing our dear Nation.

    The fight against Terror and all other forms of insecurity and insurgency, is an expensive venture requiring the adequate hardware deployment ,the right armor and the right technology.

    All of these means money.

    The ability and capability of our military are to be considerably increased in terms of the platforms that would be procured, and in the provision of specialized training that would be needed to end the war on terror and other allied wars.

    As the nation is acquiring and procuring these new equipments, it means further consolidating on other areas where there are challenges so that the troops will be able to use these equipment and operate very efficiently to be able to defeat all the criminals threatening the Unity of our Dear Country, Nigeria.

    This author of this article, Comrade Oladimeji Odeyemi is a security analyst and a counter terrorist expert , He’s the Convener,  of the Coalition of Civil Society Groups against Terrorism in Nigeria