Tag: borno

  • Jonathan orders rescue of abducted girls

    President Goodluck Jonathan has given a presidential directive for all the abducted secondary school girls in Chibok, Borno State to be rescued alive.

    About 234 girls writing exams in the school were abducted by terrorists over two weeks ago.
    Jonathan gave the order on Sunday at a meeting between himself and Borno State Governor, Kashim Shettima at the Presidential Villa.

    The meeting which ended in the early hours of Sunday also had in attendance the Deputy governor of the state, Borno Commissioner for Education, Mr. Musa Kubo, the chairman of the local government, the State Commissioner of Police, the Divisional Police Officer and the Principal of the school, Asabe Kwabura.

    Also at the meeting were Vice President Namadi Sambo; Senate President, David Mark; Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Anyim Pius and security chiefs.

    Briefing State House correspondents at the end of the meeting, the Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Dr. Reuben Abati said that there was clear instruction from the President to those who attended the meeting on the urgent need to rescue the girls on time.

    According to him, the meeting was a follow up to the meeting President Jonathan had on Friday as part of efforts to quickly rescue the girls.

    Abati said that there was a high-powered collaboration among all stakeholders, including government at all levels and the community to ensure the safety of the girls.

    “The President has given very clear directives that everything must be done to ensure that those girls are brought back to safety.

    “There was a lot of discussion. This is the first time the President will be meeting with all the other key persons like the school principal, the local government chairman and the commissioner of police.

    “Before now, the President and the governor meet regularly. This is a security operation and at this stage, it is not every detail of the efforts of the Federal Government that will be put into public domain particularly that there are indications that those responsible for the abduction have been issuing all kinds of threats,” Abati stated.

    According to Abati, “What is clear is the determination, the commitment and the resolve of Mr. President and the governor to make sure that these girls are brought back to safety.”

    “I don’t want to deal with numbers. Even if it is one person, the safety of every Nigerian is important,” he added

    At the end of the meeting, the President and his team waited back and met with the Borno governor and his deputy for about 15 minutes.

    The Borno delegation declined to speak to journalists at the end of the meetings.

  • Jonathan sets up panel on 234 abducted girls

    Jonathan sets up panel on 234 abducted girls

    President Goodluck Jonathan on Friday set up a fact-finding committee to find out the circumstances surrounding the reported abduction of about 234 secondary school girls in Chibok, Borno State.

    The decision was taken at a high-level meeting at Aso Villa to review the security situation in the country, especially the bombing at Nyanya on Thursday and the kidnapping of girls of Government Secondary School, Chibok, Borno State, on 15th April, 2014 by suspected terrorists.

    The Minister of Information, Labaran Maku disclosed this to State House correspondents at the end of Jonathan’s meeting with the service chiefs, Inspector General of Police, Mohammed Abubakar, Minister of Defence, Aliyu Gusau, Vice President Namadi Sambo and other security agencies and some other ministers.

    Maku briefed in the company of the Military spokesman, Chris Olukolade, Police spokesman, Frank Mba, State Security Service (SSS) spokesperson, Marilyn Ogar and the Senior Special Assistant to the President on Public Affairs, Doyin Okupe. Stressing that the composition and terms of reference of the committee will soon be made public, he said that it is made up of security agencies, civil society, international organizations and other stakeholders. He said: “On the unfortunate kidnap of the Chibok girls, the security chiefs briefed the meeting on efforts so far made to locate and rescue the girls, and bring the perpetrators to justice. Extensive and intensive aerial surveillance by the Air Force has been carried out in all the routes leading into and out of Chibok up to the Chad and Cameroun borders. Other parts of Borno and Adamawa states are also under the searchlight.” “Every information relayed to security agencies has so far been investigated, including the search of all places suspected as a possible hide-away of the kidnapped girls. The police, backed up by the military and DSS, have combed and are still combing all reported places that the girls might have been taken to. In view of the inconsistent and contradictory information available to government on the Chibok abduction, the President has set up a fact-finding committee comprising security agencies, civil society, international organizations and other stakeholders.” Noting that the President shares in the pain and anguish of the parents and guardians of the Chibok girls abducted by the terrorists, he said: “The President’s heart goes out to these our unfortunate daughters who have had to endure the trauma of abduction and separation from their loved ones. The government and people of Nigeria stand solidly by them.” He said that the President also appealed to the parents, guardians, relations and members of the public to furnish security agencies with all the information that will assist in the rescue of the girls. Maku added: “Government also appreciates the public outpouring of support and the sentiment expressed so far by all Nigerians, including civil society groups who have come out to condemn the abduction of the girls and terrorism in the country. Government strongly believes that the people of Nigeria, standing together, will overcome the current security challenges.” “The President has directed that the security agencies should intensify efforts to rescue the Chibok girls. The President assures Nigerians that “wherever the girls are in the world, we will get them back, apprehend and punish the culprits”. He stated. On the latest Nyanya bomb blast he said: “The meeting received updates on the second Nyanya bombing, the ongoing search for the Chibok girls, and efforts made so far to deal with related incidents of insecurity and terrorism in the country.” “On Nyanya, the President directed security chiefs to increase surveillance and expedite investigation into the explosion to ensure that those behind the heinous act are arrested and brought to justice.” The President, he said, commiserated with the families of the deceased in the latest bombing at Nyanya, sympathized with all those who were injured in the incident and directed full medical treatment for the victims at government expense. According to him, the President also directed for additional proactive measures by security agencies to enhance public safety, including increased public awareness for citizens to step up their cooperation with security agencies by reporting suspected activities and persons likely to cause a breach of public peace, safety and security. He also disclosed that the government is doing everything possible to ensure the successful hosting of the World Economic Forum in Abuja next week. Noting that the intention of the terrorists is to intimidate and shut down the government, he declared that terror will never shut down Nigeria. According to him, Nigeria has not invited any direct foreign intervention in the fight against insurgency but have been collaborating with other countries.

  • We can publish names, pictures of victims, says Borno

    We can publish names, pictures of victims, says Borno

    The Borno State government yesterday said it would publish the names and pictures of the abducted girls, if permitted.

    Governor Kashim Shettima spoke yesterday in reaction to a statement by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Women Leader Mrs. Kema Chikwe doubting if the girls were actually abducted.

    A statement by the governor’s Special Adviser on Media, Isa Gusau, reads: “We have read with very rude shock, media reports attributed to National Women Leader of the PDP, raising doubts on whether indeed, schoolgirls were abducted at Government Girls Secondary School, Chibok on April 14, 2014 or not. This is clear case of bringing politics into a serious national issue that bothers on the lives of over 200 schoolgirls which is highly unfortunate.

    “We find that report a big affront that undermines the National Security Council which held a meeting that dwelled extensively on the matter with a directive to the armed forces to rescue the girls.  By her remark, Chikwe has undermined the integrity of all of Nigeria’s security forces because her questions appear to mean that the security agencies in the country do not know what they are doing for holding a National Security Council meeting and deliberating on something that was doubtful and yet giving directives to address it. This incident happened 17 days ago, every Nigerian expects that by now, the security agencies must have been carrying out investigations that might have included debriefing some of the girls that escaped from captivity, speaking with parents and other students of the schools. Chikwe’s remark seems to attack the integrity of the security agencies, giving the impression that nothing was done. Unlike Kema Chikwe that seeks to undermine the integrity of the security agencies and the President, what we do know and believe is that the President, Goodluck Jonathan, couldn’t have deemed it necessary to host an expanded National Security Council that was attended by him, all Security chiefs, Governors of the 36 States and key leaders of this country during which the schoolgirls was extensively discussed if the President was not properly briefed by the security agencies under the Federal Government, that schoolgirls were abducted. The school was virtually razed now, security agencies know this and they know that the attack and abduction took place. The Defence Headquarters have issued several statements including one that says forces were closing in on the abductors; we therefore wonder why Chikwe should make mockery of all of these patriotic efforts.

    “Even though most of the school buildings were razed during that attack and property vandalised, records of schoolgirls that registered for WAEC and NECO exams cannot be a difficult one to get since the examination bodies are there with records. In addition to that, parents lodged complaints that should naturally have the names of their children or wards. It is expectedly thought that security agencies would by now, have necessary information about these girls which might include their records. However, the Borno State Government has a comprehensive data that includes pictures of the missing students and those that returned, which the Government is ready to publish on Friday, May 2, 2014 if the Defence Headquarters which has since been managing information on counter insurgency operations in the Northeast, gives the go ahead and Mrs Chikwe, who now knows more than the security can ensure that. Our fear is not to reveal names that would reveal religion and family backgrounds which could at the end, compromise the safety of these girls; provide basis for families to be reached with demands for ransom or be accused of undermining rescue efforts or sensationalism. In addition to these, abduction of girls are sometimes interpreted to mean automatic rape, where the identity of these are revealed, they could be stigmatised even after being rescued. Doubt raised by Mrs Chikwe displays insensitivity to the plight of parents of these girls and to the feelings of all Borno people. The Borno State Government is the most troubled by the incident. The Governor of Borno State is as should be expected, under so much pressure from families and community members of Chibok and indeed the rest of the State. These girls are daughters of Borno, by being abducted while in school, the Borno State Government naturally comes under more pressure because they were abducted while being under our care as a Government, the school was not the only one in session when that attack took place, there were other schools were girls were writing exams. It might recalled that sometime back when there was rumours that some schoolgirls were abducted following an attack in Konduga, Governor Shettima directed a prompt investigation and after it was found out that no student was recorded missing, the Government told Nigerians that there was nothing like that. Even on the one of Chibok which is the topic of discussion, Governor Shettima announced that 129 girls were at school as at the time of the attack, it was during his visit that parents who filed reports about missing students said the girls were over 200, it was clear to everyone that the Governor never had any intention of making claims of large numbers of missing persons. It is important that the Nigeria security agencies call Mrs Chikwe to order so she desist from mocking the National Security Council and misleading Nigerians and rest of the world that have been attracted by this unfortunate incident which has left the Government and people of Borno State highly distressed.”

  • Abduction: We saw no soldiers in bush, say victims’ parents

    Abduction: We saw no soldiers in bush, say victims’ parents

    •Borno still searching for 84 school girls

    PARENTS and relations of students of the Girls Secondary School Chibok in Borno State abducted by suspected insurgents returned home yesterday without any of the girls.

    They alleged no soldier went in search of the girls because none of them was at sight throughout their stints in the farthest parts of the bush.

    The parents told the Hausa service of the BBC that throughout their 12- hour search in the forest, they did not come in contact with any soldier but found abandoned huts, breads and vehicles possibly belonging to security agents.

    There was no trace of the girls, the parents added.

    One of the parents, who spoke with the BBC on condition of anonymity, said throughout their fruitless search in the Sambisa forest, they did not come in contact with any Nigerian soldier in the forest.

    He said they began their search in the forest at about 6 am but could not trace any of the abducted female students until they gave up the search at about 6 pm.

    According to him: “We were about 200 in the forest but we had to return back. We couldn’t sleep there; we saw nothing but make shift huts that were erected in the bushes.

    “We saw vehicles like that of security agents in the bush, there were so many things, and there was even bread.

    “We however saw a different set of people who asked of our mission and we told them. It is a very thick forest and anyone would be scared to explore the forest.

    “Contrary to claims by the authorities that soldiers were in the forest trying to rescue the school girls, we saw nobody; we didn’t see any vigilante agent too. We did not see any security agent, even in our dreams. These soldiers, we didn’t see any”.

    The Borno State Government yesterday said it is searching for 84 students of the Government Girls’ Secondary School, Chibok.

    It said although one of the missing students returned to the school yesterday, she was not among those abducted.

    The Commissioner for Education, Mr. Musa Kubo, made the disclosure in an update last night against the backdrop of sustained search for the school girls by parents and volunteers.

    It was learnt that those in the search team were locked up in the forest to secure the release of the girls.

    The statement by Kubo said: “I am afraid we do not have an update that is as encouraging as Friday’s. Only one of our missing students returned today (Saturday).

    “She was not among those abducted. She was however one of the 129 girls at the hostel on that black day the Government Girls’ Secondary School, Chibok was attacked.

    “She ran out of the school during the attack and thereafter, went to her parents. She was brought back by her mother on Saturday.”

    Kubo, who gave a breakdown of the rescue operation, said the 45 girls in the school are being reconnected with their families.

    He added: “So far, we now have 45 students back in school. Out of this number, 28 escaped from abduction while 17 fled home during the attack and returned home.

    “As at yesterday, we had 44 students. Today, we have 45 while 84 are yet to be found. Like I explained in yesterday’s release, all the accounted girls are being reconnected with their families as a tactical measure pending the return of their colleagues and subsequent decision by the State Governor on the way forward.

    “Like I also said yesterday, we are hopefully expecting the return of our 84 students as intensive search and rescue efforts continue. I once again like always, acknowledge the combined efforts of the security agencies and civilian volunteers for their patriotism”.

    A top security source, who spoke in confidence, said: “Most parents, local vigilante groups and sympathisers involved in the search have opted to remain in the forest to secure the release of the girls. This is the level of patriotism which parents and locals have demonstrated so far.”

     

  • Borno Information Commissioner sacked

    Maiduguri – The Borno Government on Friday said it had dropped the Commissioner for Information, Mr Inuwa Bwala, from its cabinet.

    This is contained in a statement issued by Hajiya Maryam Abba-Ibrahim, Permanent Secretary (Administration) Office of the Secretary to the State Government.

    The statement reads in part, “Gov. Kashim Shettima has approved the removal of Mr Inuwa Bwala from his position as the Commissioner for Information.

    “The former commissioner has been directed to hand over government property to the permanent secretary in the ministry with immediately effect.’’

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) recalls that Bwala had also served in the same portfolio under former Gov. Ali Sheriff.

  • Borno: 5 policemen, others killed in bomb blasts

    About ten persons have been feared killed Tuesday morning in two separate bomb blasts in Dalori, Konjuga local government area of Borno state.

    The victims including two suicide bombers are believed to have been killed by suspected members of the  Boko Haram sect along Barma road.

    An eye witness told The Nation that the  five policemen were on patrol when their vehicle were blown up by the suicide bombers on the highway around Dalori, about five kilometres from the University of Maiduguri.

    According to eye witnesses at the Dalori check point area of the road,another bomb had exploded about five kilometres from Dalori during  which the suicide bombers allegedly threw an improvised bomb into a vehicle of a commuter killing three civilians inside another vehicle.

    “It is the same vehicle that deliberately drove into the police vehicle  killing all five policemen inside the patrol vehicle. The Policemen had accosted the vehicle for normal stop and search which has been going on since last week’s attack on Giwa barracks by the insurgents but the suicide bombers rather drove their vehicle into the police  while simultaneously throwing an IDI bomb into their vehicle. 

    “The Police vehicle exploded instantly throwing the policemen in different directions tearing their flesh into pieces destroying their patrol vehicle beyond recognition.” said our source

    The two suicide bombers died inside a golf vehicle burnt  at the check point.

    Although Police spokesman ASP Jibrin could not be reached for confirmation  nurses at the causality wing of the University of Maiduguiri teaching hospital said the the charred bodies of the five policeman have been deposited at the morgue.

    “We received the bodies of the five police officers which were battered and badly burnt beyond recognition while about fourteen wounded cases have been reported so far.

    “We have been tending to the wounded and I do not think there is any very critical case that would lead to death on ground now”  said the source

  • Borno: Civilian JTF solicits FG’s support

    Mr. Iliasu Saidu, spokesperson for the Borno Civilian Joint Task Force (JTF), has solicited the Federal Government’s logistics support in the fight against Boko Haram in the North East.

    Saidu said this while speaking with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja.

    He also solicited for support for the JTF by providing vehicles and allowances for the youth.

    This, according to him, will serve as motivation to fight the Boko Haram.

    According to him, what the entire JTF do is to give information to the military so that it can help them in their job.

    Saidu said that no fewer than 2,500 youths made up the organisation.

    He added that the state government was planning to recruit additional 1,500 to make up to 4,000, to further assist the military in their operation.

    He said that the activities of the civilian JTF had helped to secure lives and property in the troubled state, adding that all that was needed currently was the Federal Government’s assistance.

    “Borno is Nigeria and the people fermenting violence and the killings are Nigerians; if we can have assistance from the Federal Government, it will help us to achieve peace.”

    He called on the Nigerian youth to join hands with the JTF to bring peace to the North East.

    “ Borno is a beautiful state which must not be taken over by hoodlums,’’ he added

     

  • Troops kill 20 insurgents in Borno, Adamawa

    Troops kill 20 insurgents in Borno, Adamawa

    The Defence Headquarters Thursday said no fewer than 20 Boko Haram insurgents were killed by troops during raids in communities around Maiduguri and Dikwa, Borno State.

    The troops also destroyed insurgent camps at forest locations in mountainous areas around Adamawa State.

    A statement by the Director of Defence Information, Major General Chris Olukolade yesterday said arms recovered from the insurgents included various brands of machine guns and improvised explosive devices.

    Olukolade added that some of the federal troops also sustained varying degree of injuries during the encounters.

    The statement said: “Attempts by terrorists to attack Ajiri and Mafa as well as other communities in the outskirt of Maiduguri and Dikwa in Borno State towards the Cameroon borders, yesterday were foiled by the security forces.

    “The ambush mounted by the terrorists to enable them unleash terror on the communities unchallenged, was also cleared by troops on reinforcement mission”.

    The DHQ however expressed concern over what it described as inflammatory pronouncements by some highly placed persons in government and some apparently sponsored commentators in and outside the country.

    According to Olukolade, the unnamed highly placed persons have consistently be giving false and misleading remarks to describe the disposition of troops in the ongoing operations.

    “It has become clear that this sustained campaign is intended to demoralise the troops and give the impression that the military is overwhelmed by the terrorist group.  This tendency is unfortunate, to say the least.

    “For the avoidance of any doubt, it is hereby restated that the Nigerian military cannot by any standard be overwhelmed by the insurgents neither will the devious antics of their sympathisers and sponsors demoralise the fighting spirit of troops.

    “Nigerians and indeed all well-wishers are enjoined to discountenance the propaganda messages of the terrorists and their backers alleging the inability of Nigerians troops to handle the insurgency,” the statement added.

  • We can crush Boko Haram, says Air Chief

    We can crush Boko Haram, says Air Chief

    The Chief of Air Staff (CAS), Air Marshal Adesola Amosu has assured that the Nigerian Armed Forces have the capacity to crush the Boko Haram insurgency in the Northeastern part of the country as soon as possible.
    Amosu gave the assurance yesterday while receiving the Commandant of the Armed Forces Command and Staff College, Air Vice Marshal John Ifemeje who paid him a courtesy visit in his office.
    The Amosu said there is a synergy between his office and that of the Chief of Army Staff, with the view to designing the appropriate approach to effectively counter the onslaught by the rampaging insurgents.
    The insurgents have killed dozens of innocent Nigerians, including school children, in a string of attacks launched on soft targets in communities in Borno, Yobe and Adamawa States in the last two weeks.
    A statement yesterday by the Director of Public Relations and Information of the Air Force, Air Commodore Yususf Anas, said the Air and Army Chiefs are in constant touch with troops stationed at the troubled states.
    The statement added that the troops are in high spirits and inspired to crush the insurgents in record time, adding that the officers and men in the front lines are being motivated to achieve results.
    The Air Chief hinted of renewed collaboration with other security agencies with the aim of effectively tackling the festering insurgency and restoring normalcy to the affected areas.
    The statement quoted Amosu to have said that the Armed Forces were already thinking of post insurgency plans and strategising on how to “keep the place clean”, to avoid a relapse to the killing spree.
    He was also quoted to have posited that the task in the envisaged post insurgency era would require more technology-based platforms.
    The Air Chief called for commitment of and sacrifice from members of the Armed Forces, as the Federal Government continued to provide funding and support for the campaign.
  • Wanted: A war cabinet    

    Wanted: A war cabinet    

    It was a catalogue of deaths and destruction last week when the Boko Haram terrorists went on a killing-spree in the three Nigeria’s northeast states of Yobe, Adamawa and Borno. The attacks started on Tuesday at the Federal Government College, Buni Yadi, Yobe State, where no fewer than 43 students were killed. From there, they moved to Shuwa, in Magadali Local Government Area of Adamawa state where a teachers’ college, a secondary school and a Catholic covent were attacked. By Saturday, it was the turn of Maiduguri, the Borno State capital, where a twin-bomb explosion tore through the heart of the city, killing more than 50 people. Mainok, a village about 50 kilometers from Maiduguri, also had a taste of the orgy of violence and blood-letting.

    The attack on the Government College, Buni Yadi, bore the full imprimatur of a similar one on Saturday, September 28, 2013 at the College of Agriculture, Guijba, in the same state. In that attack, more than 50 students of the school met their untimely death. The terrorists attacked the college at midnight when most of the students were deeply asleep. That also, was not without precedence. In June 2013, the terrorists killed eight pupils and a teacher during an attack on Government Secondary School, Damaturu, capital of Yobe State. They also killed 29 pupils at Government Secondary School, Mamudo, also in the state.

    On Saturday, April 13, 2013, an unspecified number of students of Monguno Secondary School, in Monguno Local Government of Borno State, were killed as they returned home on foot and bicycles from the centres where they wrote the West African Examination Council (WAEC) Senior Secondary Certificate Examination (SSCE). Before that daylight massacre, six secondary school teachers, including a principal, were also hacked down by the terrorists in the same local government area.

    It is sad that our so-called security forces have always been caught napping each time these marauders come calling. In the killings of the school children who were accosted on their way from their examination centres in April 2013, no security agent was sighted at the scene of the slaughtering until more than three hours later. The same scenario has played out again and again. It was the same story at the School of Agriculture, Gujba. In the recent incident at FGC, Buni Yadi, the killers did not only have the luxury of time to carry out their devilish act, they also proved that they were out to destroy the hopes of tomorrow by separating the girls from the boys. While they mowed down the boys, they simply drove the girls away from school and advised them to go and get married instead of wasting their time at school. That is true to their name Boko Haram, which means “education is bad.”

    What is more sickening in all these, especially in last week’s incident, is the fact that the security agents who were stationed within the proximity of the schools left their checkpoints shortly before the terrorists came calling. Now, the security agents are running helter-skelter to unravel those who might have been complicit in the attacks among the local populace. Talk of medicine after death. By the way, why is it that these security agents, with the hordes of intelligence officers in their midst, have never for once nipped these attacks in the bud while the so-called rag-tag terrorists are daily giving them a bloody nose?

    There must be something wrong somewhere. It is either a failure of intelligence or non-intelligence at all, as the case may be (if I am permitted to put it that way). It is obvious that some people are aiding and abetting these criminals within the local population and among the security agents as well. For how long will the blood of our children be spilled like rotten milk on the altar of greed, selfishness and vaulting ambition of our overfed politicians both in uniform and babaringa? Every time, you hear about a fleet of vehicles consisting of more than 10 or 15 attacking a particular location. Why is it impossible for the security forces to pick them as they move along? I am quite aware that because of the dry season, almost everywhere in the affected areas is motorable at this time, but if the security forces are doing their work well, these terrorists should still be spotted.

    It is rather superfluous that while the brigandage and blood-letting that have been going on in the northeast of the country in the last four or five years (2009 – 2014) continue to spiral out of control, up till this moment, no single person has either been fingered or arrested on account of being the sponsor of this brazen terrorism against our fatherland. The other day, a former governor of one of the states in the Northeast was allegedly arrested in Cameroun by a Camerounian security officer who said he was convinced that the former governor is one of the financiers of the Boko Haram insurgency. The former governor was arrested on his way to see the governor of Northern Cameroun.

    Although the former governor in question was later released by an order from the Vice-President of Cameroun, after he quickly reached out to people, he is strongly suspected to have played a role in the rise of Boko Haram in the first instance and so, it will be difficult to isolate him from the unrelenting assault of the criminal gangs on the country. There is also this belief that this former governor may not be a Nigerian as he is said to hail from neighbouring Chad Republic, where he currently operates an airline and maintains a mansion. After his tenure as governor many years back, it was to Chad that he went to cool off and observe developments in Nigeria from the sideline until his recent visit to the country which sparked off a wave of violence in his native state.

    By now, I believe the security agencies should have the list of suspects who are collaborating with these terrorists in one way or another to wreak havoc on unsuspecting Nigerians, but, perhaps, because of political expediency, nobody wants to touch them. That is why some people think that if the President announces today that he will not be contesting the 2015 presidential election, the whole Boko Haram brouhaha will die a natural death. Since the President has an inalienable right to contest as President a second time as enshrined in the 1999 Constitution in use in the country, if he wishes, the onus is on the security agencies to do their work properly and contain this avoidable carnage that has continued to cast a dark spot on the image of the country. The only way out of this quagmire in which the country has been enmeshed all this while is the urgent need for the President to form a war cabinet.

    In the first instance, the troops which were deployed to the theatre of war in the Northeast went there purely for peacekeeping operation. Now the whole scenario has snowballed into a real war situation. Therefore, the strategy must change. A senior cabinet minister must coordinate the ‘war’. As things are now, it may be impossible for the National Security Adviser, NSA, the only person who probably performs the role of coordinating the military interventions in the Northeast, to summon any of the head of the services to a meeting – I mean summoning someone like the Chief of Army Staff or the Chief of Air Staff that are both involved in managing the crisis to a meeting – not to talk of the Chief of Defence Staff. They will just ignore him because the NSA is more or less a Staff Officer to the President. That is why there is need to quickly put a war cabinet in place.

    The war cabinet, as envisaged, will consist of seasoned Generals, both serving and retired, as well as some respectable and responsible civilians, whose duty will be to take care of the political angle to this festering crisis. It is time to end this genocide!