Tag: borno

  • UN says global conflicts has displace 65 Million People

    …26, 000 killed in the Northeast Nigeria

    The United Nations Humanitarian Coordinator in Nigeria, Mr. Edward Kallon on Friday said global conflicts and violence have caused the displacement of 65 million people, just as he informed that over 26,000 people have been killed in Northeast Nigeria.

    Kallon disclosed this in Maiduguri, the Borno state capital at a courtesy visit to Gov. Kashim Shettima to mark World Humanitarian Day (WHD) at the Government House.

    The WHD he said was set aside by the United Nations to express solidarity with people affected by humanitarian crises and pay tribute to workers that helped victims of conflict and violence.

    His words: “This year’s commemoration marks the 15th Anniversary since the attack on the United Nations in Baghdad, Iraq in which 22 of our colleagues were killed.

    “Since that tragedy, which led to this day’s designation as WHD; over 4,000 humanitarians aid workers have been killed, injured, detained or kidnapped.”

    He noted that global conflicts, including Boko Haram insurgency in

    Northeast Nigeria kills an average of 300 people each year, adding that, “Globally, conflicts are forcing record numbers of people from their homes, with the displacement of over 65 million.

    “Children are recruited by armed groups and used to fight, while women are also abused and humiliated.”

    Mr. Kallon regretted that in as much as  humanitarian workers deliver aid , medical supplies and sucor  for those in need, they are however;  either targeted or treated as threats.

    He said in Northeast region, civilians continue to bear the brunt of the conflict that leding to widespread forced displacement, abuse and violations of international humanitarian and human rights law including sexual and gender-based violence on a daily basis.

    Mr. Kallon also condemned the abduction of thousands of women and girls just as children continue to be used on regular basis as so called “suicide” bombers.

    Continuing, he added: “Thousands of families have been forced to flee their villages and communities in Borno, Adamawa and Yobe states.

    Read Also: 68.5m people displaced globally – UNHCR

    “Aid and medical workers, who care for people affected by the violence, suffer the consequences of insecurity.”

    Speaking on conflict’s abduction and death tolls, Kallon said: “Three aid workers were killed and three abducted in March this year in Rann; an aid worker was killed in Ngala in May. A member of National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) was killed in Damasak just last week.”

    While condemning the killings and abduction of aid workers, he urged the parties to the conflict to enable the work of humanitarian workers free from undue threats and loss of lives.

    According to him, “This will facilitate their access to people in need, and in line with International Humanitarian Law”.

    The UN chief called on the immediate and unconditional release of the aid workers, who have been abducted.

    “I call on Nigerian leaders to do everything in their power to protect the people caught up in conflict,” adding that those who are concerned are to join the UN at worldhumanitarianday.org to show that civilians are #NotATarget.

    “Together, we stand with the Government of Nigeria, in solidarity with civilians in conflict, and with the humanitarian workers who risk their lives to help them”, he said.

    Governor Kashim Shettima in a short remark said that 1.5 million people have been displaced due to the Boko Haram crisis in the last nine years.

    Governor Shettima also informed that out of the figure of the displaced people , 164,000 Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) have returned to their liberated communities in Mobbar, Dikwa, Gwoza, Ngala, Konduga, Bama, Damboa, Mafa and Askira/Uba councils.

    He however regretted that Abadam and Marte council areas are not secured enough for IDPs return to their communities because they are still vulnerable to Boko elements that were recently pushed by the military drom the Lake Chad Basin.

    Governor Shettima was however optimistic that the situation will be better soon.

  • NAF fighter jet destroys Boko Haram hideout in Borno

    The Nigerian Air Force (NAF) says the Air Task Force (ATF) of Operation Lafiya  Dole  has conducted a successful attack on a Boko Haram Terrorists’ (BHTs) Hideout in Daban Masara in Borno.

    Air Commodore Ibikunle Daramola, NAF Director of Public Relations and Information, who disclosed this in a statement on Saturday in Abuja, said that the operation was carried out on Friday.

    ” The surgical air strikes were conducted on the strength of credible intelligence which indicated that remnants of BHTs on the Lake Chad Islands were hiding out in settlements at the Southern part of the lake, including Daban Masara, and were amassing in some buildings for a meeting.

    “An air interdiction mission was therefore planned and executed to destroy 2 out of the green roofed buildings within Daban Masara that were identified as BHT rendezvous points.

    ” Upon receiving the intelligence, the ATF dispatched a NAF Alpha Jet aircraft, along with an Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance (ISR) platform, to attack the 2 buildings where the BHTs were gathered with bombs.

    ” Overhead the area of interest, the Alpha Jet successfully released its bombs on the targets in successive strikes leading to massive destruction of the target buildings as well as the neutralisation of several BHTs,” he said.

  • Troops neutralise 16 insurgents in Borno

    Troops at the weekend neutralised 16 Boko Haram terrorists during its clearance operation in Mairari, Monguno Local Government Area of Borno State.

    A statement by the Deputy Director of Public Relations, Operation Lafiya Dole, Col. Onyema Nwachukwu, said two gun trucks were also recovered.

    The statement reads: “Troops at the formation were alerted that insurgents in three vehicles, including gun trucks, had infiltrated the community.

    “The troops, supported by the Air Task Force, swiftly responded to the attack, killed 16 insurgents and captured two trucks loaded with guns, which was abandoned by the insurgents while trying to escape.

    “The troops also recovered 163 rounds of Anti-Aircraft Gun Ammunition in the encounter.”

    Col. Nwachukwu added that four civilians and a soldier were injured and have been evacuated to a Military hospital for treatment.

    “The Forward Operation Base (FOB) has been reinforced with additional troops, while fighting patrols are on the trail of the fleeing insurgents.

    “Normalcy has been restored and the people are enjoined to remain vigilant and report any suspicious person(s) or activities as they go about their normal business,” he added.

  • Army Kill 16 Insurgents, Large Cache of Arms, Ammunition in Borno

    Sixteen  Boko Haram insurgents were on Saturday killed in an encounter with troops of Operation Lafiya Dole deployed in the Forward Operational Base (FOB) along Mairari in Monguno at about 6.50 pm on Friday 27 July 2018, in Mairari, a village located in Monguno Local Government Area of Borno state.

    According a statement signed by the Deputy Director Public Relations, theatre Command Operation Lafiya Dole, Colonel Onyema Nwachukwu, the insurgents who were in three vehicles, including Gun trucks had infiltrated had attacked the community, when troops at the FOB were alerted by locals.

    According to him,the troops supported by the Air Task Force swiftly responded to the attack killing 16 insurgents and capturing 2 Gun trucks abandoned by the insurgents, as they tried escaping .

    The Army also recovered 163 Rounds of Anti Aircraft Gun Ammunition during the fierce encounter.

    He however added that 4 civilians and a soldier, sustained varying degrees of injury during the fire fight, and have been promptly evacuated to a Military Hospital, where they currently receiving medical attention.

    Meanwhile the army while assuring the people of their readiness to further combat terror has also informed that the Base has been further reinforced with additional troops, adding that fighting patrols are on the trail of the insurgents who fled the attack.

    The Army has further enjoined members of the community to remain vigilant and report any suspicious person(s) or activities as they go about their normal business as calm has since been restored and the people of Mongonu Local Government Area

  • ‘I was not born this way’

    A slender girl ambled through Lagos Street in Maiduguri, Borno’s capital, clutching a nylon pack. Her long, flowing Jilbab (outer garment) sidled back to reveal a stump where she used to have her right hand.

    Determinedly, she crept off the tarmac on to the dirt road that leads to Satus Hotel, the lodge housing clusters of United Nations agencies’ expatriates and Nigerian staff.

    As she approached the gates of the inn, two armed guards sprang through the barricades in front of the inn, guns cocked, and fingers curled around their rifles’ trigger. They barked at the girl to stop. She didn’t.

    She seemed bent on getting through the gates, into the hotel. At that juncture, one of the armed guards ducked behind the pile of sandbags. Warily, his colleague stepped forward, issuing a “last warning” to the girl to halt “for the last time!”- his lips quivering in tandem with his restive feet.

    In that instant, a cab driver leapt out of his vehicle to duck behind the hotel’s security blockade; his passenger, a Caucasian female, fled out of the vehicle towards fellow expatriates approaching the hotel on foot, causing them to beat a quick retreat.

    “They think I have come to throw bombs. No. I do not know how to throw bombs. I have only come to sell caps. My name is Shona. I am from Bama. I was not born like this. I was not born this way. Boko Haram made me this way,” she said, fiddling the stump of her right hand.

    Shona’s ordeal started the night insurgents of the dreaded terror sect, Boko Haram, invaded her neighbourhood in Bama. The 16-year-old watched helplessly as her right hand was severed from her body.

    “They killed my parents and my only brother on that night. They tried to take me away but when I refused, the leader of the squad hacked at my hand with a machete. He cut off my left hand,” she said.

    Shona recounted with grief and a mien that suggested among other things, a visceral lust for vengeance; her ordeal in the violence that extinguished her family and turned her ancestral land into a ghost town.

    Then she fell silent, staring ardently into the distance. It was a macabre silence replete with spasms of blood-curdling angst, misery and discontent, three-years old.

    Like Shona, Muhammed Abubakar suffered the gruesome end of Boko Haram’s bloody campaign in Nigeria northeast. Abubakar, 32, lived in peace with his wife, Fatima, and two-year old son, Hadji Muhammed, until he was abducted three years ago, by Boko Haram insurgents, who stormed his community on the outskirts of Cameroon.

    They whisked him off to Sambisa Forest, where he was forcibly recruited as a foot soldier. Abubakar lived in Sambisa for two years. During those years, he tried to escape thrice. At his third try, Commanders of the terror sect, lost patience with him, thus they amputated his left leg and right hand. Then they set him free.

    “Fool, you can escape now. You are of no use to us or anyone now,” they taunted him. Abubakar bled and writhed in his own blood for three days. It was a miracle that he lived. He was given no analgesic neither was he accorded the luxury of first aid treatment of his wounds.

    He said: “I bled continuously for three days. They cut off my hand as if I was an ordinary goat or livestock.”

    At the risk of contracting life-threatening diseases, he clung desperately to life, hoping for a miracle.

    That miracle came in the form of a rescue by the Nigerian Army. The latter freed Abubakar during a decisive onslaught against his captors in Sambisa Forest. Boko Haram was dislodged from the forest and Abubakar and thousands of the terrorist group’s captives regained freedom.

    Maimed in infancy

    And in a sequence that continually replays like scenes from a horror movie, gunmen invaded

    14 month-old Aisha’s village in Bama, around 5 a.m, bombing and razing houses recklessly.

    Her mother, Aisha Goni Lawal, revealed that she stepped in the bathroom to bathe soon after she bathed and dressed her child. But she had to rush out to save little Aisha, when the invaders struck and set their house on fire.

    Through the fumes and crackle of the flames, Aisha Goni struggled to put on her clothes rescue her child. Her mind whirled frighteningly when she discovered that little Aisha was ablaze; the infant burned and screamed in agony as her mother divested her delicate frame of the burning clothes. She wrapped her protectively in her Hijab and dashed out of the house into the bush.

    They spent three days in the bush, hiding from Boko Haram insurgents. Eventually, they  escaped to Konduga on a bicycle. Afterwards, they got on a bus leaving for Maiduguri.

    Little Aisha spent roughly a year and two months in the hospital, nursing severe burns over nearly half of her body.

    Eventually, she underwent a four-hour surgery; surgeons used flesh from her thigh to reconstruct her eyelids, adding flesh to the top and bottom lids. One of the child’s upper eyelids had been turned inside out, and the doctors warned that leaving it unfixed meant Aisha could lose the eye itself due to unprotected exposure. Her exposure to the flames also welded her left arm to her armpit. Surgeons did a skin graft to free the arm from the attachment. Consequently, scar tissue and burnt skin still cover visible parts of her body and half her head.

    After spending days in the trauma and intensive care unit at the hospital, Vice President Yemi Osinbajo visited her and offered to foot the cost of her medical expenses.

    And while Hadjara Mahamadou may seem luckier than Aisha, she wears a veil that covers her head and shoulders. Hidden beneath this garment, the eight-year-old has a bandaged stump instead of a right arm. When Boko Haram raided her home town of Baga three years ago, Hadjara fled the gunmen with her mother. As they fled, hand in hand, the little girl was struck by a bullet.

    But the insurgents were so close that her mother, Hassana, couldn’t afford to pause. She picked up her bleeding daughter and ran until they found a boat heading to Chad. For the next 12 hours, Hadjara travelled across Lake Chad with a bullet lodged inside her right arm.

    “I took off my veil and I used that to bandage her arm,” said Hassana, the girl’s mother. Hassana’s prompt action probably saved Hadjara from bleeding to death but it couldn’t save her limb from being amputated. By the time they got to Chad, Hadjara’s arm was beyond saving; the limb was eventually amputated at the district hospital in Baga Sola.

    Like Hadjara, 12-year-old Isa Lawan, had his right arm amputated. But unlike the girl, he didn’t suffer a gunshot, rather his arm was surgically removed following injuries from a Boko Haram attack in Maiduguri.

    A worrisome trend

    The plight of minors and adults disabled by conflict, no doubt, compels a grisly narrative. For the victims, the path leading to adolescence, is dangerously rigged with insecurities that explode like landmines, often snuffing out their lives or leaving them maimed and handicapped even before they make it through infanthood.

    According to the United Nations Children Education Fund (UNICEF), about 800,000 children have been forced to flee their homes as a result of the conflict in northeast Nigeria between Boko Haram, military forces and civilian vigilante groups. In a report released one year after the abduction of more than 276 schoolgirls in Chibok, UNICEF revealed that the number of children running for their lives within Nigeria, or crossing over the border to Chad, Niger and Cameroon, doubled in just less than a year.

    Until the Nigerian Army reclaimed northeastern territories previously dominated by Boko Haram, paths leading into Borno, Yobe and Adamawa States were littered with ghosts and entrails of lives horridly cut down; dismembered limbs, pierced eyes, ear slivers, jaw splinters, gouged lips, odd tibias, skin flaps, and toes clutter the roads like glowworms and slugs in the wake of bloody bomb blasts.

    The howl of infants, teenagers and students maniacally butchered, maimed and gunned to death in their sleep and the sorrowful tenor of their parents’ ceaseless cries mutually resonated a macabre plot of civilisation gone awry.

    Across the states, major townships and villages protruded with burnt-out cars, houses and blood spatters extending grotesquely through terrain that has proved fertile ground for radical ideologies to take root. Amid the mire, the ghosts of underage victims of the bloodbath, lunged horrifyingly from memories and graphic accounts of their deaths by loved ones and witnesses to their end.

    Although the affected regions currently enjoy a fairer deal, courtesy the military’s dislodgement of Boko Haram from their streets, the defilement of the provinces’ ancient glory and more worrisomely, the devastation of lives of the region’s innocent minors linger in the hearts of the residents. They resonate chillingly in the imagery of victims handicapped by the conflict.

    For children in particular, flight across state and international borders can be dangerous and uncertain, subjecting many to exploitation and abuse. Families often become separated in the process of flight and many children fall ill and in extreme situations lose their lives for lack of proper health care, according to Idiat Bello, a social worker. Bello noted that many children in flight are usually in need of special attention. That is because at a crucial and vulnerable time in their lives, they are brutally uprooted from their comfort zones and exposed to extreme danger and brutality.

    In times of conflict, traditional systems of social protection come under severe strain or break down completely and there are often high levels of violence, alcohol and substance abuse, family quarrels and sexual assaults according to Peter Adamu, a Zinder and Abuja-based psychologist and refugee aids volunteer.

    Like life and death travellers

    Ultimately, many displaced people must fend for themselves, or rely on poorly run, insecure camps. Many of them disappear into cities, squatting with family or friends, struggling to survive on their own. For too many of them, the tragic massacre and devastation that marred their lives will continue to afflict their psyches like happenstances that happened only yesterday and reoccur in real time.

    Many infants and adults are caught in the past by the unresolved question of missing parents, husbands, wives and children respectively. Across the various IDPs camps in Yola, Maiduguri, Jos and Abuja, many of the IDPs particularly women and children, have received little help in dealing with the trauma they experienced.

    Many of them are traumatised in some way or another yet, very few of them understand and appreciate the need for psychosocial support, partly because they did not know such a thing existed and partly because, it would be embarrassing to admit they needed help.

    A young woman, Hameeda, described her feelings of desolation. She often thought of suicide, she said. Hameeda saw her father and brother killed; she was then raped and had a gun thrust so deeply into her vagina that she will never be able to bear children. Like many other traumatised women, she chose to speak to the reporter, a stranger whom she would never see again, as a way to find brief release not available in her daily life.

    The peril of unresolved trauma

    One very recent study of trauma in non-conflict situations indicates that there may be gender differences in the response to trauma. The study found that, although the lifetime prevalence of traumatic events is slightly higher for men, women run twice the risk of developing post-traumatic stress disorders, suggesting that certain types of trauma may have a deeper and longer-term psychological impact on women and girls.

    Of course, it is not only women’s mental health that is important. Healthy psychosocial adjustment of men and boys who have experienced violence and conflict is also important to their families and communities. There are numerous indications that combat exposure and post-traumatic stress in men lead to higher levels of substance abuse and domestic violence. There is also some evidence that post-traumatic symptoms can abate for years, but then return in later life, particularly in stressful situations. This has implications especially for women as caregivers.

    The responsibility of care for others is so embedded that even in the most desperate conditions, women still try to take care of everyone around them. Often times, many women and girls express despair and regret over their inability to help as they watched their loved ones suffer or die, as they watch their children suffer abuse or starve or when they had to leave elderly relatives behind as they ran for their own lives. The guilt and helplessness that the women felt in these situations, and still feel, is an almost unbearable burden.

    At the same time, the social responsibility of caring for the ill or disabled adds heavily to the workload of women in conflict and post-conflict situations. For instance, Annata, has a child who had been severely disabled by a stray bullet. His name is Mohammed and she disclosed how her whole day is taken up with feeding and washing the child and helping him cope with his disability.

    ICRC to the rescue

    Recently, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) initiated a measure to assist victims handicapped in the terror war. The non-governmental organisation (NGO) set up the limb-fitting workshop at the hospital in August 2016 to provide prosthetics to amputees from the three northeastern states worst hit by the Boko Haram insurgency, which has claimed about 20,000 lives and left thousands of others with life-changing injuries.

    “Half of the 262 patients we have fitted with prosthetics are (Boko Haram) war victims,” said the head of the project, Jacques Forget, in a recent interview.

    The prosthetic limb cost nearly $700 (about N271, 000), thus pushing it prohibitively out of the reach of many who need it, the ICRC plans to open a similar workshop in Maiduguri, in order to meet the region’s huge prosthetic demand.

    This is undoubtedly good news to handicapped victims of the protracted insurgency in the northeast. Within and outside the region’s Internally Displaced Persons (IDP) camps, the life of the maimed remains insidiously bleak. For handicapped kids like Shona, the dispossession is absolute. She has lost her family, her home and precious limb. The teenager cuts a doleful portrait of sorrow and resignation.

    But she always tries “to remember the happy things,” she said. It is unclear what memories she summons to find happiness. Perhaps she remembers the streets and vacant lots, where she navigated adolescence with neighbourhood friends classmates.

    She probably recollects too, with a wince, the times they played dress-up and tantrums they conjured in their several girl wars, until they retired home to family, safety and sleep.

    Yet for the teenager, it’s never memorable to recollect or imagine the dog-packs and vultures roaming her wrath-torn Bama, digging for unclaimed relics of her slain family or bombed out neighbours. It is never pleasing to remember the cold-blooded insurgents aiming at dawn through dusk into their crowded markets and living rooms.

    Today, Shona’s homeland is a vast acre of rubble; where pitched and roofless houses, upended stonework and sunken stairs resonate intense dialogues of loss and tragedy. This minute, 16-year-old wanders across Maiduguri’s hostile suburbs, seeking that which no longer exists: a friendly face, a cozy bed and the certainty of a warm meal.

  • Boko Haram sacks military formation at Jakana, Borno

    Security sources have confirmed an attack on a military formation at Jakana, about 50km to Maiduguri, Borno State capital.
    According to the source, the attackers arrived with five gun trucks and engaged the military formation at the town with a superior fire power.
    The source added that the formation is now in disarray as soldiers scampered for safety
    The attack is said to have come about one hour ago at the time of filling this report.
    The Nation recall that the insurgents have recently scaled up attacks in the theatre with the attacks with three ambush in Bama, Jili and Sasawa in Yobe State where an unspecified number of soldiers were killed.
    Details of the Jakana attack are still unclear as the army authorities have not issued any official statement.
  • Alleged murder: Police explains arrest of Borno politician

    The Borno Police Command said it arrested a politician, Alhaji Grema Terrab, in connection with allegations of murder and inciting disturbances.

    The Commissioner of Police, Mr Damian Chukwu, explained this in a statement issued on Friday in Maiduguri.

    Chukwu, who was reacting to reports that Terrab was detained by the police, said the arrest was necessitated by the murder and other allegations against the politician.

    “The command wishes to state categorically that while it is true that one Alhaji Grema Terrab has been arrested over his role in the offences of culpable homicide, inciting disturbances and sundry other offences, which occurred at his residence on 15th April, 2018 most of the claims in the report under reference are false in its entirety.

    “It is worthy of note that Terrab, on 15th April, 2018, organised a political event at his residential quarters, contrary to security advice by the police.

    “Expectedly, the meeting attracted large crowd of people. In the course of the event, and right inside his residential premises, one Maina Mustapha Babagana, a 20-year-old welder, was stabbed to death by persons present at the event,” he said.

    Chukwu explained that contrary to speculations, Terrab did not present himself to the police to report the incident.

    He said that the politician also refused to honour series of invitations extended to him by the police, rather went into hiding.

    The commissioner added that the police subsequently declared the politician wanted after due processes.

    According to him, the police evacuated the corpse at the politician’s resident and invited those present at the scene of the crime for questioning.

    Chukwu disclosed that on April 16, one Saadatu Muhammad Ali, who was also at the scene of crime fell ill and referred to Umaru Shehu Ultramodern Hospital, Maiduguri, for treatment.

    “In the course of the treatment, a comprehensive test and an abdominal-pelvic scan were conducted on her at the Jidere Diagnostic and Clinical Services, Maiduguri.

    “The result of the medical tests indicated normal-sized ‘anteverted empty uterus’ without any complication or miscarriage as alleged in the media reports.

    “She was not released on bail by the police as alleged by the media, but charged to court alongside other suspects,” the police boss said.

    Chukwu confirmed that Terrab was arrested by the police on July 17, during a political visit by former Vice President Atiku Abubakar in Maiduguri.

    He noted that the suspect had been charged to court, and assured of police commitment to be non-partisan, neutral, fair and just in the discharge of their duties. (NAN)

  • Army repels attack, neutralises 22 terrorists

    The Army said on Monday it neutralised 22 suspected terrorists in Bama Local Government Area of Borno, while several others escaped with gunshot wounds after troops repelled an attack.

    The army spokesman, Brig.-Gen. Texas Chukwu, who disclosed this in a statement, however, denied a report that the terrorists attacked, killed soldiers and carted away some military vehicles.

    Chukwu said the report was “not only untrue but misleading and blown out of proportion”. He admitted that there was an attempted attack on troops at Kwakwa and Chingori communities in Bama area by suspected terrorists due to difficult terrain where troops “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.

    “Unfortunately, one officer and a soldier sustained injuries and are currently receiving medical attention at the military medical facility,” he said. Chukwu urged residents of the North East to disregard the report as their safety was guaranteed.

  • 23 soldiers missing in Borno

    Twenty-three soldiers and eight trucks are said to be missing after Boko Haram insurgents ambushed a military convoy at Boboshe, Bama Local Government Area of Borno State on Saturday.

    It was gathered that the military, acting on intelligence, mobilised troops in a convoy of 11 trucks to clear the insurgents from the deserted village.

    The insurgents are believed to be those who escaped ongoing military offensives on the fringes of Sambisa Forest and Lake Chad region.

    A military source told News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) that only three of the 11 trucks returned to their base in Maiduguri.

    The source said: “There was a quick response by the Army when they received reports that hundreds of the insurgents gathered at Boboshe on the Maiduguri-Konduga-Bama road.

    “The soldiers were ambushed and only three of the 11 trucks returned to the base. It is not clear what happened but it was assumed the soldiers went missing.”

    Meanwhile, residents of Jilli in Gubio Local Government Area of Borno State have fled their community following an attack by Boko Haram insurgents.

    It was learnt that insurgents attacked the area from the Lake Chad axis.

    A resident, Malam Bukar Mustapha, told NAN that he and other villagers fled their homes when they received report that the insurgents were coming to attack them.

    He said: “On Saturday afternoon, we heard that the insurgents had gathered in the nearby bush preparing for the attack.

    “I am one of those who ran to Maiduguri, which is about 45 kilometres from my village.

    “On Sunday morning, I called Gubio and I was told that the insurgents attacked the town at night. I do not have the casualties because the situation is still not clear at Jilli.”

  • Buhari’s war against terrorism and echoes of victory from northern Borno

    The fight against insurgency in Nigeria precedes this present administration. The level of destructions experienced regarding physical and emotional impacts are unquantifiable. We were witness to terror. We stared at death in the face. We were at the mercy of insurgents as nobody and nowhere were safe anymore.

    We were witness to attacks on critical government infrastructure such as the headquarters of the Nigeria Police Force, the headquarters of the United Nations, and many others. It was gory. The private sector was not left out too. There were also stacks on media houses. And we also lost brilliant and promising Nigerians, quite a black era in the annals of Nigeria.
    Fast forward to 2018, and you would have a reason to thank God. The president was at Monguno recently at the Nigerian Army Day Celebration. For the president as well as the indigenes of Monguno, it was an emotional meeting because there was a time that Monguno was under the firm control of Boko Haram insurgents. The frequency of attacks in the local government area was phenomenal. But all of that is history, thanks to the coming of President Muhammadu Buhari and the appointment of a seasoned infantry officer as Chief of Army Staff.
    I am particular about the choice of Monguno for certain reasons. It was a sharp departure from the usual parade, combat march past, weaponry and equipment usually displays at the Eagle Square in Abuja or any of the big cities in the country. And it adds to the narrative of once upon a time, Monguno was under constant attacks from Boko Haram insurgents. But not anymore.
    Some might not fully appreciate the efforts of the military in the fight against insurgency, but when the story of Monguno and northern Borno is analyzed, and then we will begin to appreciate the leadership of the Nigerian Army under Lt. Gen. Tukur Buratai. As a first, I knew something was going to change in the Nigerian Army upon the assumption of office of President Muhammdu Buhari because, in a way, the army is his constituency. I knew he was going to get the best for the position of Chief of Army Staff. And so when he made the announcement sometime in 2015, I said yes. Yes for the fact that things were going to turn around. Yes because I knew that the end of Boko Haram was just around the corner. And I wasn’t wrong. How was this possible? The military achieved all these feats through transparency and accountability, the hallmark of the present administration.
    Back to the crux of the issue, Monguno is not just a local government area in Borno state. It is one of the local government areas with military bases. And guess what? The military base in Mongono was not only attacked, but it was also ransacked by Boko Haram insurgents sometime in 2015. It was indeed a shame. Some said it was unthinkable. Some even said it was as a result of lack of strategy and motivation. Some also blamed the leadership of the Nigerian Army. But in all of these, it was evident that something was wrong. It was also apparent that something would give and eventually Monguno eventually fell into the hands of Boko Haram insurgents.
    Now fast forward to 2018. Monguno is not only safe, but it also hosted the prestigious Nigerian Army Day celebrations and the president, as well as other notable dignitaries, was also in attendance. At the event, the president expressed his delight in the following words:
    “I am delighted to be in your midst today on this special occasion of the Nigerian Army Day Celebration 2018. I am particularly elated by choice of the venue for this year’s celebration here in Monguno, Northern Borno State. The choice of this venue is very noteworthy and assuring to all Nigerians that the negative history which was associated with the North East in the past decade is now gradually becoming a thing of the past. We are aware of the effects of Boko Haram insurgency on the livelihood, economy, and security of the North East people.”
    “It’s gratifying to hear on a daily basis the progress of our gallant troops as they carry out clearance operations along the fringes of Lake Chad Waters and Northern Borno. Members of the Boko Haram insurgents now surrender willingly in their numbers to our troops. Today is a perfect opportunity for me to again sincerely commend members of the Armed Forces particularly the Nigerian Army for their role in the defeat of the Boko Haram insurgents and for the many sacrifices they have made in ensuring the safety of our great nation.”
    These were the words of the president who is naturally excited by the successes recorded by the Nigerian Military in the fight against the insurgency. Like I mentioned earlier, the significance of the event is not that it is the routine Nigerian Army Day Celebrations, but the fact that it was hosted in an area that was once under constant attacks from Boko Haram insurgents.
    This is worthy of celebration. It is indeed a testament to the capacity of the service chiefs, especially that of the Nigerian Army in the fight against insurgency in North East Nigeria. If we must be honest with ourselves, before the coming of President Muhammadu Buhari, the country was indeed under siege that we feared for our continued existence. But today, Northern Borno state has been liberated. And that speaks volume of leadership and capacity. I am tempted to mention how the Chief of Army Staff, Lt.Gen. Tukur Buratai has been able to lead the troops to victory. But in all, I will say it has been a job well-done.

    Kolawole, PhD is a University Lecturer and writing from Keffi.