Tag: boko haram

  • Military rescues 84, recovers weapons

    Military rescues 84, recovers weapons

    At least 84 people have been rescued and heavy military weapons recovered from Boko Haram fighters by Nigerian army.

    The Army said on Saturday that the breakthrough was recorded during an operation in Borno State.

    A total of 84 persons held hostage by the insurgents at Camp Zairo were rescued by the troops and have been handed over to the Borno State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA).

    The Theatre Commander of Operation Lafiya Dole, Major General Rogers Nicholas, that some of the women rescued were found to be pregnant while the children among them looked malnourished.

    The 84 persons were flown by the Air Component of the Operation Lafiya Dole to Maiduguri, the state capital after being freed from the heavily guarded camp.

    Major General Rogers Nicholas, who handed the victims over to SEMA, said most of them are tasting freedom for the first time in about three years after their abduction.

    The Nigerian Army has revealed another breakthrough recorded during an operation in which a military tank and other weapons were recovered from the Boko Haram terrorists in Borno State.

    A total of 84 persons held hostage by the insurgents at Camp Zairo were rescued by the troops and have been handed over to the Borno State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA).

    According to him, some of the women rescued were found to be pregnant while the children among them looked malnourished.The Theatre Commander of Operation Lafiya Dole, Major General Rogers Nicholas, disclosed this on Saturday to reporters in the state.

    The 84 persons were flown by the Air Component of the Operation Lafiya Dole to Maiduguri, the state capital after being freed from the heavily guarded camp.

    Weapons seized from fighters

    Major General Rogers Nicholas, who handed the victims over to SEMA, said most of them are tasting freedom for the first time in about three years after their abduction.

    At least 26 Boko Haram members surrendered to the military authorities in Damboa Local Government Area of Borno State earlier in the week.

    The ‘repentant’ terrorists were paraded on Friday in Maiduguri, the Borno State capital after they were quizzed by the military.

    They were said to have surrendered last week and turned over their arms and ammunition including RPGs, after which they were taken to Maiduguri for deradicalizsation.

    More than 2300 fighters have surrendered in the last 13 months following intensive military action and seizure of the Sambisa forest, the main enclave of the insurgents.

    More than 25,000 people have been killed in the insurgency since 2009 and at least 2.4 million Nigerians displaced in the northeast states of Adamawa, Yobe and Borno.

    Meanwhile, the Army has confirmed it would conduct more exercises in 2018 to assist civil authorities to deal with internal security challenges in parts of the country.

    The Chief of Army Staff, Lt.-Gen. Tukur Buratai, said on Friday after leading troops on a 15km Route March.

    Buratai said exercises `Harbin Kunama III, Crocodile Smile III and Egwu Eke Dance III would also be conducted in 2018.

    Exercise Harbin Kunama I and II were conducted in 2016 and 2017, respectively, to deal with the menace of cattle rustling and herdsmen/farmers clashes in parts of North-West and North-Central.

  • Video: Army parades 26 repentant Boko Haram fighters

    Video: Army parades 26 repentant Boko Haram fighters

    The Nigerian Army yesterday paraded 26 ‘repentant’ Boko Haram members in Maiduguri, Borno State, after they surrendered to the military authorities.

    The former terrorists  surrendered in Damboa Local Government Area of the  state last week and turned over their arms and ammunition after which they were taken to Maiduguri for de-radicalization.

    More than 2300 fighters have surrendered in the last 13 months following intensive military action and seizure of the Sambisa forest, the main enclave of the insurgents.

    Recent statistics reveal  that over 25,000 people have been killed in the insurgency since 2009 and at least 2.4 million Nigerians displaced in the northeast states of Adamawa, Yobe and Borno.

    The Chief of Army Staff, Lt.-Gen. Tukur Buratai yesterday  said that the army would conduct more exercises this year to assist the civil authorities to deal with internal security challenges in parts of the country.

    Buratai spoke to reporters after leading troops on a 15km Route March in Maiduguri.

    Coming up, according to him, are Exercises Harbin Kunama III, Crocodile Smile III and Egwu Eke Dance III.

    [jwplayer VDi79ZnH]

    Exercise Harbin Kunama I and II were conducted in 2016 and 2017 to deal with the menace of cattle rustling and herdsmen/farmers clashes in parts of North-West and North-Central.

    Crocodile Smile and Egwu Eke Dance took place  in the Niger Delta and the South-East, respectively last year  to tackle pipeline vandalism, oil theft and piracy, violent agitation and kidnapping.

    Although Buratai said there would be no special exercise to address recurring herdsmen/farmers clashes in Benue, Taraba and part of Nasawara State, he said: “We are going to train on general areas which could include that aspect (Benue killings) as well. But our focus will be to ensure that security is provided across the country.”

    The defence chief charged the troops to be prepared for deployment to any part of the country at short notice, to assist civil authorities to tackle internal security challenges.

    He said he had approved funds for training in 2018 and therefore, they should expect “robust training” during the period.

    According to him, “this is to enable us to accomplish the task assigned to us by the Commander-In-Chief.”

     

  • Boko Haram suspects go on public trial in Niger

    Boko Haram suspects go on public trial in Niger

    At least 81 people accused of fighting for Boko Haram went on trial  in a public court sitting in Niger Thursday.

    It was the first of its kind after closed-door trials of suspected insurgents were criticised by human rights groups, Reuters reported.

    Those on trial in a special international court in Niamey were from Niger, Nigeria and Chad.

    They were suspected of playing  various roles in Boko Haram’s near decade-long bid to create a caliphate in Nigeria.

    The insurgency has spread beyond its roots in Nigeria, killing 20,000 and uprooting nearly three million in the Lake Chad region.

    The Niamey trials followed closed-door court sittings, including in Nigeria where a court in October last year sentenced 45 people to between three and 31 years in jail.

    The court will hear 22 separate cases over the next 10 days, following the trial of nearly 300 people on similar charges last year.

    In all, about 1,000 people are expected to appear before the court.

  • Army parades 26 repentant Boko Haram fighters

    Army parades 26 repentant Boko Haram fighters

    The army on Friday paraded 26 repentant Boko Haram members in Maiduguri, Borno State.

    The former terrorists surrendered to military authorities in Damboa local government area of the state last week and turned over their arms and ammunition including RPGs, after which they were taken to Maiduguri for de-radicalization.

    They were then quizzed by the military authorities to be sure of their true intention.

    More than 2,300 fighters have surrendered in the last 13 months following intensive military action and seizure of the Sambisa forest, the main enclave of the insurgents.

    More than 25,000 people have been killed in the insurgency since 2009 and at least 2.4 million Nigerians displaced in the North East states of Adamawa, Yobe and Borno.

     

     

  • Air Force Bombs Boko Haram in Sambisa

    Air Force Bombs Boko Haram in Sambisa

    The Nigerian Air Force ( NAF ) said on Thursday that it has used Remotely Piloted Aircraft (RPA) to destroy and kill a number of Boko Haram terrorists in the Sambisa general area.
    Air Vice Marshal Olatokunbo Adesanya, the NAF’s Director of Public relations and Information made the disclosure in a statement.
    AVM Adesanya who attached a video footage of the operation to the statement, said the operation was done after a routine armed reconnaissance of the area.
    He said: ” A Nigerian Air Force (NAF) remotely piloted aircraft (RPA), on 30 January 2018, successfully destroyed another Boko Haram Terrorists (BHT) gun truck in the SAMBISA general area.
    “The NAF RPA sighted the gun truck around ALAFA while on a routine armed reconnaissance of the area, following the dislodgement of the insurgents from Camp ZAIRO.
    “The RPA picked up the trail of the gun truck until it arrived at ALAFA, where it was subsequently attacked.
    “The air strike by the NAF RPA resulted in the immediate destruction of the vehicles in the targeted location, killing all the BHTs inside it, as no survivors were seen scampering from the location after impact”.
  • Paucity of funds stalling fight against Boko Haram – Buratai

    Paucity of funds stalling fight against Boko Haram – Buratai

    The Chief of Army Staff, Lt. Gen. Tukur Buratai, said on Thursday that paucity of funds was inhibiting the army’s efforts to deal decisively with the security challenge posed by the Boko Haram insurgents in the North East.

    Buratai told the Senate Committee on Army that the same lack of resources was affecting the army bids to tackle other security challenges in the country.

    The army chief stated these when he appeared before the committee to defend the 2018 budget of the Nigeria Army.

    He said most security challenges could have been nipped in the bud if needed resources were made available to them.

    Buratai, who welcomed the suggestion by the committee that the army and other security agencies should be placed on first line charge, noted that “the first line charge advocacy is very important.”

    He said they welcomed 100 per cent release of their budgetary allocation in line with the first line charge advocacy.

    On the budget, he said the Budget and National Planning office gave the army N233.05 billion while they requested for N261.67 billion.

    The army chief listed some critical projects needed by the Force to include procurement of drones and aerial reconnaissance center (N2.5b), rehabilitation of barracks (N5bn), procurement of arms and ammunition (N4.8bn), funds for additional three divisions and new operational activation each N1.5 b totaling N4.5b.

    Buratai, who reassured that the Nigeria Army is committed to the protection of the territorial integrity of Nigeria, noted that they are working to clear the remnants of Boko Haram insurgents from Sambisa forest and dark spots in the North East.

  • Borno  spends N8bn on post-insurgency healthcare projects

    Borno spends N8bn on post-insurgency healthcare projects

     The Borno Government says it has spent over N8 billion on reconstruction and rehabilitation of health facilities destroyed by the Boko Haram insurgents in the state.

    The News reports that health sector is one of the areas worst hit by the insurgency as the large scale destruction of facilities has paralysed medical services in the state.

    Statistics by the United Nation Office for Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs ( UN-OCHA ) shows that 6.9 million people need healthcare interventions in the North-East due to humanitarian crisis caused by the Boko Haram insurgency.

    According to the UN agency, a greater percentage of those in need are in Borno, who cannot access quality healthcare services especially in rural communities.

    In an attempt to mitigate the effects and transform the sector, the Borno Government in collaboration with the Federal Government and development organisations embarked on massive reconstruction and rehabilitation of projects to enhance healthcare delivery at the grassroots.

    The State Government had spent over N4 billion on procurement of medical equipment and another N4 billion on rehabilitation of 248 health facilities ravaged by the terrorists.

    The state Commissioner of Health, Mr Haruna Mishelia, said the insurgents had destroyed over 80 per cent of healthcare facilities, including 19 General Hospitals, which he said, crippled healthcare delivery in the state.

    Mshelia, however, said that in spite of the security challenges posed by the insurgency, the state government initiated viable projects designed to reinvigorate the sector and enhance quality healthcare delivery to the people.

    He said the projects were executed in the liberated communities in the 27 local government areas in the past two years, adding that rehabilitation and upgrading works on 19 general hospitals were successfully completed.

    The commissioner listed the projects to include the general hospitals in Guzamala, Rann, Chibok, Uba, Biu, Askira, Kwayar-Kusar, Mafa, and Dikwa general hospitals.

    Others are: Mobbar; Shani, Marama, Munguno, Damboa, Ngala, Benisheikh, Konduga, Ngarannam, Kaga, Gwoza and Kukawa general hospitals, adding that plans had reached advanced stage for the establishment of 8 new general hospitals in addition to the existing 24.

    He said eight general hospitals had so far been equipped with modern equipment to enhance their operations, and they included Maryam Abacha Women and Children Hospital; Moloi, Shani, Biu, Benisheikh, Gubio, Konduga and Dikwa general hospitals.

    Read Also:Army donates sports items, others to IDPs in  Borno

    “Two other hospitals at Azare and Gajiram have been upgraded to 80-bed Capacity, while work on a 250-bed capacity women and children Hospital was completed,” he said.

    Mshelia also disclosed that N4.2 billion was spent on procurement of medical equipment such as radio diagnostic and scanning machines, ethno-cardiographs, mammography and digital X-ray gadgets.

    According to him, the equipment would be distributed to Accident and Emergency (A&E) and Intensive Care Units in the hospitals.

    On immunisation and disease control, the commissioner said over N200 million was spent to replenish the paediatrics department at Specialist Hospital, Maiduguri, as well as rehabilitation of the Primary Health Care Development Agency (PHCDA) office.

    He said the state government was collaborating with Bill and Melinda Gates as well as Dangote Foundations to enhance routine immunisation.

    Under the partnership over $1 million dollars were spent on rehabilitation and provision of medical equipment to 40 clinics.

    Equally, about one million people were inoculated against cholera; 1.3 million children immunised against polio and measles; 888, 905 children and expectant mothers provided with free malaria drugs and 2.1 mosquito nets were distributed to households.

    “Through our partnership, we are able to control outbreak of epidemics such as cholera, meningitis and Hepatitis E,” Mshelia said.

    He also disclosed that the state government was providing free drugs in all the health facilities and had introduced integrated healthcare services in the Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) camps.

    He said the state government had recruited 100 doctors and awarded scholarship to 60 female medical students to address the manpower shortage in the health sector.

    Statistics by the state Ministry of Health shows that there are 4, 800 health workers in the state, comprising 158 doctors; 1, 094 Nurses and Midwives; 29 laboratory scientists; 150 laboratory Technicians; 250 community health attendants and 12 pharmacists.

    NAN

     

  • UNHCR launches $157m appeal fund for Boko Haram victims

    UNHCR launches $157m appeal fund for Boko Haram victims

    The United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) and its humanitarian partners on Wednesday launched an inter-agency funding appeal of $157 million dollars for people affected by the Boko Haram insurgency in the Lake Chad Basin region.

    The Deputy UN High Commissioner for Refugees, Ms Kelly Clements, said at the appeal launched in Niamey, Niger, that “the Boko Haram crisis lingers on and is far from over.

    The 47 UN agencies, including the UNHCR, and humanitarian organisations participating in the 2018 Nigeria Regional Refugee Response Plan will provide support to some 208,000 Nigerian refugees.

    The agencies would also provide support for 75,000 of the Nigerian refugees’ hosts in Niger, Cameroon and Chad.

    “The world should not forget the victims of this deadly conflict, especially as there appears to be little hope for a return to peace and stability in the near future,” Clements said.

    She said Nigerian refugees continued to arrive in very remote and impoverished communities in neighbouring countries.

    The UNHCR said since it started in 2013, the Boko Haram conflict has internally displaced another 2.4 million people in North East Nigeria, Cameroon, Chad and Niger.

    NAN