Tag: boko haram

  • Buhari, Equatorial Guinea President meet in Aso Rock 

    Buhari, Equatorial Guinea President meet in Aso Rock 

    *Equatorial Guinea President seeks dialogue as solution to African problems

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Tuesday met with Equatorial Guinea President, Theodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo, at the Presidential Villa, Abuja. 

    At the end of the closed doors meeting, Equatorial Guinea President, advocated for dialogue as the solution to the myriad of crises plaguing various countries in West African sub-region.

    Speaking with State House journalists, he said that he came to visit Buhari to know about the state of his health in view of the health crisis he went through for the better part of last year.

    Stressing that the visit was also in line with a maxim that when a fellow person is down, it is the responsibility of persons around him to seek his wellbeing, he said that he was glad to see the President looking hail and healthy.

    He also congratulated Buhari for giant strides in the fight against Boko Haram, which he said had caused a great havoc which had spread to some other West African countries including Chad and Cameroon.

    According to him, through Buhari’s committed fight against Boko Haram, the insurgent group is almost eliminated but for pockets of attacks still being carried out by the insurgents.

    “One of the salient issues in the meeting was that l congratulated our dear brother for the great fight against Boko Haram. We realised that Boko Haram had caused a great havoc that had been carried all over the sub-region including Chad and Cameroon. He is doing a great job. He’s almost eradicating the menace of Boko Haram apart from pockets of attacks here and there,” he said.

    Mbasogo, who spoke in Spanish, aided by an interpreter, said the meeting also discussed security concerns in the neighbouring West African countries.

    He said that he and Buhari considered the need to work together with a view to securing a common ground for development and cooperation to achieve desired goals.

    The President who also narrated how his country had been a victim of varying security crises orchestrated by some terrorists from Chad and Sudan in collaboration with a group of deviants from France, disclosed that his decision to promptly reach out to Cameroon helped to put the situation under control.

    Narrating how the country became a victim of the first coup d’etat in 2004, Mbasogo said through the cooperation of neighbouring countries, the coup plotters were apprehended and imprisoned for several years until the government opted to pardon and free them.

    On the plan of West African leaders on the crisis which broke out in Southern Cameroon and resulted in the influx of refugees into Nigeria, Mbasogo said there is no country without its own peculiar crisis.

    According to him, it only behoves on parties concerned to put heads together and embrace dialogue as the platform for solution to the crisis.

    “Cameroon is a big nation whose crisis requires the concern of all forces. There is no nation without its own crisis. What is required is to seek solution through dialogue and use it to find a common axis. Those seeking refuge in other lands need to sit down together and find solution through dialogue. It is only through that, they can find solution to the crisis,” he said.

    On the challenge of piracy in the Gulf of Guinea, Mbasogo who said the pirates were destroying and sabotaging Nigeria’s development effort in the area, also advocated dialogue as solution to the crisis.

    “On piracy in the Gulf of Guinea, the pirates are destroying and sabotaging the property of Nigeria. The government of Nigeria cannot develop the area. What is warming therefore is to expect the government of Nigeria to bring the parties to dialogue for a solution to the crisis.

    “In Equatorial Guinea, we feel concerned. We all need to put our hands on deck to ensure that there is security in all regions. We have to develop our nations and we can only do so under peace and harmony,” he said.

  • NULGE: how to end Boko Haram, herdsmen killings

    NULGE: how to end Boko Haram, herdsmen killings

    The Nigeria Union of Local Government Employees (NULGE) at the weekend urged President Muhammadu Buhari and governors to approve local government autonomy by the 36 legislatures to tackle security challenges, particularly in rural areas.

    The leadership of the union in the Southwest noted that since majority of the killings by herdsmen took place on farms in the rural areas, local government authorities, if empowered administratively and financially, could curtail the security threat occasioned by Boko Haram and Fulani herdsmen attacks.

    Addressing reporters in Akure, Ondo State capital, after its zonal meeting, the union’s National Vice President in the Southwest, Oluwadare Famoofo said since majority of Nigerians, including traditional rulers, supported local government autonomy, governors should back it.

    Famoofo, who was with NULGE presidents in Oyo, Ogun, Lagos, Ekiti, Osun and Ondo states, noted that council autonomy would enable their chairmen to engage vigilantes for effective security.

    He said: “Granting local government autonomy at this time will go a long way in not only restoring but improving socio-economic development of the nation and ensure national, political and educational stabilities.”

    The NULGE chief urged state lawmakers to hold public hearings on constitutional amendment to enable stakeholders express their support for local government autonomy as approved by the National Assembly in July.

    Famoofo hailed Benue and Cross River legislatures for taking a lead in approving council autonomy.

    He said: “The body, therefore, pleads with the Nigerian masses, civil society groups and religious leaders to support Houses of Assembly to follow the path of Benue and Cross River states by granting local government autonomy in their states in the spirit of national development.”

    The Ondo State NULGE Chairman Dr Bunmi Eniayewu said council autonomy remained the fastest and appropriate way to guarantee growth at the grassroots and a viable democratic process.

  • Insurgency: ECOWAS Parliament, UNHCR tour affected Adamawa communities

    Insurgency: ECOWAS Parliament, UNHCR tour affected Adamawa communities

    Some members of ECOWAS Parliament and United Nations Refugee Agency (UNHCR) have commenced tour of some communities affected by insurgency and Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) camps in Adamawa.

    Welcoming the group in Gulak, headquarters of Madagali local government area of the state, the Vice Chairman of the LGA, Mr. Thomas Feaku, said the area was under siege since December.

    He said: “As from December 23, the area recorded Boko Haram attack almost on daily basis; the latest was the attack at kaya village on Friday where five people died.

    “People in many villages in the interior are leaving due to fear of attacks. We want government to deploy more troops to this area.”

    The District Head of Gulak, Alhaji Bello Tsimda, said the security challenge in Madagali was serious that many Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs) and agencies rendering support to returnees were avoiding the area.

    Tsimda said many returnees could not find business to do as farmers could not go to farm and markets in the area could not operate due to fear of attack.

    Officials of ECOWAS Parliament and UNHCR, Mrs. Asabe Bashir and Mr. Mohammed Tejan, said they were in Madagali on a joint mission to hear from returnees in insurgency affected areas in Nigeria and other affected countries like Niger and Mali for support.

    NAN

  • Borno relaxes curfew in Maiduguri

    Borno relaxes curfew in Maiduguri

    The Borno state government has relaxed the three-week curfew imposed on Maiduguri, the state capital.

    The state Commissioner of Home Affairs, Information and Culture, Dr. Muhammad Bulama, said on Saturday that the curfew would now be observed between 10:30 p.m. and 6:00 a.m.

    The review will give residents some measure of relief, as the curfew used to take effect from 8:00 p.m., till 6:00 a.m.

    There is, however, no reprieve for residents of Moloi and Muna Garage, target of attacks by Boko Haram fighters.

    Bulama said that the curfew would still be observed between 6:00 p.m. and 6:00 a.m. in the areas.

    He explained that the action was sequel to the advice of the Theatre Command, Operation Lafiya Dole.

    The Borno Government on January 2, reviewed the curfew, hitherto, observed between 10: 00 p.m. and 6:00 a.m. in view of the prevailing security situation in the state.

    NAN

     

     

  • Five killed in Adamawa attack

    Five killed in Adamawa attack

    Suspected members of Boko Haram sect on Thursday attacked Kaya village in Madagali local government area of Adamawa State and killed five people.

    The early morning attack came 48 hours after a similar assault on Pallam.

    Three people were killed in that incident.

    Soldiers and local hunters who went after the invaders shoot two of them dead, residents said.

    A member of the House of Representatives from the area, Adamu Kamale, confirmed the attack.

    He said: ‘’I got a distress call early morning (yesterday) that they (Boko Haram) struck again in Kaya village, killing at least five people and others injured.

    ‘’The recent attacks indicate the group is still able to carry out major attacks and has not been defeated despite the successes achieved by Nigerian soldiers in the war.

    ‘‘You know our communities are a stone’s throw from the boundary of Sambisa Forest, the insurgents’ safe haven from where they launched attacks on us.”

  • How Boko Haram changed tactics, strike Maiduguri at curfew dateline

    How Boko Haram changed tactics, strike Maiduguri at curfew dateline

    …14 killed, 65 injured 

    There are clear indications that the last dastardly suicide attack at Alai Fubawu Market at Muna Garage in Maiduguri may have caught residents and security agents off guards as the insurgents equally changed their planning amidst the reviewed curfew in place.

    A security source who does not want to be mentioned told our correspondent that the insurgents ‘not resting on their oars’ took advantage of the improved security, targeted the curfew timeline,  what he described as the rush hour of the curfew to infiltrate the crowd and subsequently unleash terror causing havoc resulting to heavy casualty and injuries on innocent people.

    “This fight is not yet over but the people and we the security agencies forget very easily. Once there is a break in attacks, the residents’ vigilance drops and security operatives too become relaxed.

    “Staying in the northeast and Maiduguri especially requires maximum alertness and prayers for one not to be caught by these heinous acts of terror from the Boko Haram terrorist”, the source said.

    The attack at Muna Garage on the 17/01/2018 marked one of the first major attacks on maiduguri for this year, 2018.

    “You can see clearly that it was the time the curfew was about to close that these insurgents hurriedly smuggled themselves into the people to strike. This shows that they are equally changing their strategies alongside with security agents. Those times of the curfew are very critical time. It’s always good to finish your business in time and avoid the rush hours,” another security source informed.

    Not fewer than 10 innocent civilians were killed and 65 others were injured in blasts which took place on the 17/01/2018 in the evening. 

    The four suicide bombers who also lost their lives brought the total figure of death casualties to 14. 

    According to the  Borno State Police Command, at least 12 persons were killed and 48 others injured on in the attack.

    The police narrative of the account , the Commissioner of Police, Damian Chukwu, said a male suicide bomber detonated an explosive device at a crowded market killing himself and 10 other persons.

    “One other suicide bomber out of panic detonated explosive and blew himself alone into pieces,” he said.

    Mr. Chukwu said the wounded persons were evacuated to the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital.

    The police commissioner called on the people to be vigilant and report suspicious persons in their communities to security agencies.

    “People should be vigilant because Boko Haram insurgents have not surrendered”.

    The Nation reports that the Maiduguri  attack came three days after Boko Haram’s leader Abubakar Shekau released a video of the Chibok girls still held by Boko Haram claiming that they will never return again.

    The video also showed Shekau said his group last year “willingly” released 107 schoolgirls who refused to accept his creed, but the estimated 100 who remain are pleased to stay with Boko Haram and unwilling to return to their parents.

    The clip also showed images of military vehicles, armored tanks and a helicopter that Shekau claimed his men had destroyed during a shootout last week.

  • Military clears 95 deradicalised Boko Haram members

    Military clears 95 deradicalised Boko Haram members

    The military on Thursday cleared a total of 95 surrendered Boko Haram terrorists having undergone De-radicalisation, Rehabilitation and Re-integration (DRR) programme organised by the military authorities through its Operation Safe Corridors.

    They were certified fit for reintegration into the society.

    However, it was gathered that modalities that would determine how this would be done is being worked out by the special committee set up by the governors of Adamawa, Borno and Yobe States, the Chief of Army Staff, the Chief of Air Staff, the Inspector General of Police (IGP) and the Director General of Department of State Service (DSS) among others.

    Accordingly, the de-radicalised Boko Haram members would be transferred to their various state authorities for re-integration to their communities.

    The 95 surrendered Boko Haram fighters, who were admitted into military facilities located in Gombe State in July 2017, according to the military, have successfully gone through its 16-week deradicalisation programe.

    The Chief of Defence Staff (CDS), Gen. Abayomi Olonisakin, who disclosed this on Thursday in his opening remarks at a stakeholders’ meeting to work out modalities for the reintegration of rehabilitated ex-Boko Haram fighters, held at the Defence Headquarters, Abuja, said having followed the activities in the camp since the ex- fighters arrived there, he was hopeful that they were different from who they were six months ago.

    Olonisakin said: “The ex- fighters have been transformed, made to imbibe good characters and habits, and have also learnt vocational trades to empower them.

    “The DPR camp, located in Gombe State is structured and mandated to absorb surrendered Boko Haram terrorists and cleared suspects into the De-radicalisation, Rehabilitation and Re-integration Programme under the military’s Operation Safe Corridors (OPSC).”

    The Commandant of DRR Camp of Operation Safe Corridors, Col Adegoke Adetuyi, while giving a review of the programme, said out of the 95 deradicalised Boko Haram fighters, Borno State alone has a total of 91 while Adamawa and Bauchi have one each, leaving Yobe also with two.

    He said the 95 Boko Haram ex- combatants that commenced the DRR programme in July 2017, were adequately exposed to various therapies in the de-radicalisation, rehabilitation and rehabilitation programme.

     

  • NAF destroys Boko Haram facilities, kills insurgents

    NAF destroys Boko Haram facilities, kills insurgents

    The Nigerian Air Force (NAF) said on Wednesday it used remotely piloted aircraft to destroy emerging Boko Haram vehicle workshop in the Sambisa general area.

    It added that Boko Haram members who were within the vicinity of the target area were killed in the operation as well.

    A statement issued by the Director of Information and Public Relations of NAF, Air Vice Marshal Olatokunbo Adesanya, said the operation was carried out after an Intelligence,  Surveillance and Reconnaissance (ISR) platform had established the presence of the insurgents and their facilities in the area.

    The statement reads: “A Nigerian Air Force (NAF) Remotely Piloted Aircraft (RPA), on 15 January 2018, successfully destroyed an emerging Boko Haram Terrorists (BHT) vehicle workshop in the Sambisa general area.

    “A NAF Intelligence Surveillance and Reconnaissance (ISR) platform had previously discovered that BHT vehicles were parked in the location. Consequently, a NAF RPA was detailed to conduct armed reconnaissance in search of BHT vehicles and terrorists around the location, which was apparently being used as a vehicle workshop.

    “The RPA discovered that BHT motorcycles and vehicles, including a BHT Commander’s vehicle were parked in the targeted area. Additionally, several terrorists were seen moving intermittently within the targeted area.

    “The subsequent 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.”

  • Video: ‘We won’t return’, abducted Chibok girls

    Video: ‘We won’t return’, abducted Chibok girls

    Terrorist group, Boko Haram on Monday released a new video showing remaining schoolgirls abducted four years ago from Chibok, Borno State.

    The video is the first since May last year when another woman who also claimed to be among the 219 seized from the town in Borno state said she wanted to stay back.

    It was not clear when or where the latest video was recorded and The Nation is unable to verified the video released by Saharareporters.

    A group of about 12 girls and young women, some of whom are holding babies, are seen in the video.

    “We are the Chibok girls, you have been crying we should be released. But by the grace of Allah, we will not return home,” one of the girls said in the released video.

    “These people are taking care of us and we are grateful to them. We are happy here – we have found our faith,” she added.

    The video also paraded some women believed to be police officers who were abducted in June 2017, the women sobbed as a Boko Haram speaker recited the Qur’an before asking some of them to speak on video.

    Shekau also in the video claimed responsibility for the downing of a Nigerian air force helicopter on January 5. A part wreckage of a helicopter is also shown in the footage .

    “I am not wounded, I am ready to fight and will continue to fight,”  he said as he read from a prepared speech in  Hausa and flanked left and right by well-armed lieutenants.

    Boko Haram seized 276 students from the Government Girls Secondary School in the mostly Christian town on April 14, 2014, triggering global condemnation.

    Fifty-nine of them managed to escape in the hours that followed. A campaign for the release of their classmates has had the support of Hollywood stars to global leaders.

    A total of 107 girls have now been either found, rescued or released as part of government negotiations with the Islamic State group affiliate.

    They have now returned to the northeast and are back in education at the American University of Nigeria, in the Adamawa state capital, Yola.

    On January 4, the Nigerian army said it had rescued another of the girls’ classmates in the Pulka region of Borno, near the border with Cameroon.

    Boko Haram has used kidnapping as a weapon of war in the conflict, which has killed at least 20,000 people in northeast Nigeria and displaced more than 2.6 million.

    Thousands of women and young girls have been seized and held hostage, including as sex slaves, while men and young boys have been forcibly recruited to fight alongside the militants.

  • Nigerian army has succeeded in keeping the country united – Secondus

    Nigerian army has succeeded in keeping the country united – Secondus

    The National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party ( PDP ) Prince Uche Secondus has said that the nation’s armed forces have succeeded in keeping the country united.

    Prince Secondus said in a statement today, Sunday, to mark the armed forces Remembrance Day, emphasised that Nigeria is standing as one country today due largely to the contributions of the armed forces to keep it United.

    The PDP boss noted the gallantry of Nigeria troops in containing the Boko Haram insurgency and the supreme sacrifice paid by federal troops and urged them to remain focused to the cause of a United Nigeria.

    “You must remain committed to your profession and to the development of the country’s armed forces in particular and the country in general,” Secondus advised the rest of the citizens, especially political leaders to appreciate the huge contributions of the soldiers and those who paid the supreme sacrifice by being more patriotic and accommodating.

    The PDP leader called on the security agencies to be more civil in carrying out their obligations and know that their responsibility is to the country and its citizens and not to only government in power.