Tag: Dapchi

  • Army justifies troops withdrawal at Dapchi

    Army justifies troops withdrawal at Dapchi

     …says Gov. Gaidam”s statement is misleading

    The Nigeria Army has explained why it withdrew troop at Dapchi town before the last attack on the town that led to the abduction of 110 girls at Government Girls Science Technical College, Dapchi.

    According to a statement signed by Col Onyema Nwachukwu Deputy Director Public Relations and spokesman Theatre Command Operation Lafiya Dole said the withdrawal was purely an operational exigency following an attack in some part of northern Yobe where the troops were deployed for reinforcement.

    Col. Onyema emphasised that  the priority of the army is not to join iasues with Gov. Ibrahim Gaidam but instead to correct the misleading information credited to the Governor which he described as not “unfortunate but far from the truth”.

    The statement also assured parents of the missing girls that the military is working tirelessly to rescued the abducted girls.

     

    The statement read in full:
    “The attention of Headquarters Theatre Command Operations  LAFIYA DOLE,  has been drawn to a  statement credited to His Excellency Alhaji (Dr) Ibrahim Gaidam, Executive Governor of Yobe State, currently circulating in the media, in which he reportedly alleged that the withdrawal of the  military was responsible for the recent suspected Boko Haram terrorists’ attack and abduction of female students  from Government Girls Science Technical College in Dapchi . This allegation is not only unfortunate, but also very far from the truth

    “Although this Headquarters will not attempt to join in any blame game, it is very expedient to set the record straight for the benefit of posterity.  In carrying out its mandate to counter terrorism and insurgency in north eastern Nigeria, Operation Lafiya Dole  has been alive to its responsibilities vis a vis the fight against Boko Haram insurgents. Several communities and Local Governments that were hitherto under siege of the insurgents have been liberated and the insurgents pushed out . While troops continue to trail and decimate the remnants of the insurgents in the hinterlands, the security of the liberated communities and towns fall in the hands of the sister security agencies. The recent dislodgement and further decimation of the insurgents from their enclaves in the Sambisa and the Lake Chad Islands are testimonials to the effective operations of troops against the insurgents.

    “Additionally, troops are regularly conducting long range patrols, raids and ambushes to canalise and take out fleeing insurgents. Given all these efforts, it is very astonishing and shocking that such unfortunate comment and allegation is been touted against the loyal and dedicated troops of Operation Lafiya Dole.

    “Contrary to the comments being circulated, troops earlier deployed in Dapchi were redeployed to reinforce  troops at Kanama following attacks on troops’ location at the Nigerian – Nigerien border. This was on the premise that Dapchi has been relatively calm and peaceful and the security of Dapchi town was formally handed over to the Nigeria Police Division located in the town. Troops’ redeployment was therefore done in tandem with the exigencies of operation and not as misconstrued.

    “It is thus obligatory, to state that the allegation reportedly attributed to the Governor of Yobe state is misleading and misinforming.  We reiterate our commitment and determination to carrying out our mandate to fight Boko Haram terrorists in the north east. We also implore members of the public to continue to support us with credible information on the whereabouts of the Boko Haram terrorists. We would also like to assure the parents, government and the good people of Yobe State and indeed members of the public that we will not rest on our oars in the search and rescue of the abducted school girls and any other persons held captive by the terrorists”.

     

  • Dapchi girls, enemy’s poison

    Dapchi girls, enemy’s poison

    Nothing can justify the Dapchi girls story, not after we were irate that Goodluck Jonathan was dancing Azonto in Kano while the goons carted away our Chibok schoolgirls. It is not enough that the President does not deny it like Jonathan or calls it a disaster. That is no solace for the mothers and fathers and the community who threw stones as Governor Ibrahim Gaidam’s convoy whirred by.

    Yobe Governor Gaidam may have displayed optimistic naivety with his first press statement celebrating the rescue of some girls. But the media was also naïve for using the word rescue when there was no narrative as to how it happened. Were there shootouts, casualties, arrests?

    I accept Gaidam’s apology but not stories of our security forces who had no inkling of what was happening in a long stretch of land. No security forces saw trucks carrying many school girls, even if we accept that they came looking harmless into the town.

    This is an era when the top men of Nigeria security forces are fighting turf wars in Abuja, while the president looks almost impotent.

    Gaidam is taking responsibility for what belongs to the DSS and inspector general of police all under the presidency. The governor does not control the police or intelligence forces yet we call him the chief security officer. Hence some of our northern governors now back state police. Facts, Charles Dickens writes, is compelling.

    Gaidam should save himself by naming those who misled his government. Or else he will bell another foe’s cat, or eat the enemy’s poison.

  • Dapchi: Fears, lessons and fury

    SIR: The Dapchi debacle where at least 105 girls were abducted has reminiscence of Chibok experience. On April 15, 2014, 276 girls were abducted from government Secondary school, Chibok Maiduguri. This is February 2018 and 105 girls are missing from another girls’ school in neighbouring Yobe State.

    The abductions share some basic similarities albeit different time, space, but definitely share same purpose. The abductions are carried out just penultimate year to election. We may recall that in 2014, the abduction of 276 Chibok girls contributed largely to Jonathan losing election. I have no doubt the same purpose the Dapchi debacle is meant to achieve.

    What Nigerians should be scared of going forward is the nature of political game-play where human lives may become the currency to transact business where politicians and party platforms will battle out in exchange to clinch to power. I have no doubt the Dapchi kidnap, just like the Chibok embarrassment is designed to discredit the government in power to pave way for another. While we fear this may be the feature of our political future, the APC may well learn from a scenario it used excellently well in raising the most crafted propaganda in the history of Nigeria to unseat the PDP in 2015.

    We do not know who was behind the 2014, only time and providence will make us know who is behind the 2018 abduction. Largely Christian girls were abducted in 2014, this time they are mostly Muslims. Those behind the two abductions are definitely persons without respect for the next religious belief, hence the choice of school to attack under different leadership.

    Sadly, the far-reaching consequence of this hideous political tool will definitely destroy the country if not stopped in its track. The conscious trend of terror-supported politics is already having a place in our political construct. It therefore means that terror is fast becoming a part of the political stratosphere.

    While government is searching for the missing girls, it is instructive to unravel those behind this heinous crime to humanity. We have always settled for peripheral solutions, failing utterly to probe deeper. Government must not play hastily with this to score cheap points. The politicians veiled behind these terrorists who must be uncovered.

     

    • Israel A. Ebije,

        ebijeo5@gmail.com

     

  • Dapchi, déjà vu?

    When militants last Monday storm-trooped a girls school in Dapchi, Yobe State, displacing the students and their minders and apparently abducting some, it was a virtual reenactment of the nightmare we tangled with not too long go in Nigerian nationhood history.

    The militants, suspected to be Boko Haramists, struck under the cover of night at the Government Girls Science Technical College (GGSTC) in a gang raid for which they deployed explosives and heavy weaponry mounted on trucks, some of which were said to have been camouflaged in military colours. They reportedly fired random shots as they approached the state-run boarding school that caters for girls aged from 11 years, sending students and teachers on the premises fleeing in the dark through jungle paths for safety in nearby habitations. The lucky ones brazed injuries from thistles and thorns, and reportedly in some cases from snakebites, to make it to ‘safety’ and have since returned home. Luckless ones, as it now seems obvious, were made away with by the assailants.

    The hapless students and their teachers apparently picked some lessons from the experience of fellow students in Chibok, neighbouring Borno State, where Boko Haramists struck at a girls school in April 2014 and herded the girls into captivity. Facts were severely affronted in ensuing accounts of that calamity, such that the Goodluck Jonathan administration then in the saddle indeed locked down in denial that the incident ever took place. But it is generally known now that 276 girls were trucked off by the Chibok assailants, who reportedly beguiled the girls to come on board for their safety. A handful of the victims eventually took pluck to jump off the captors’ train; a few more were rescued in military raids, while 100 were released last May by captors in a deal with the present Muhammadu Buhari presidency. It is widely reckoned that 112 Chibok girls yet remain in Boko Haram captivity.

    It would seem that other than modest lessons in survival shown by the Dapchi girls to have been learnt from the Chibok saga, very little has been learnt by anybody else. Dapchi, by all contortions, is veritably Chibok déjà vu, and we seem as a nation to been treading the same paths that made up the Chibok mishap. All the more curious, perhaps, is that the attack was reenacted as before in an electioneering year.

    Official narratives conflicted wildly on whether the Dapchi girls fled the attack or were napped by the assailants. The line trumpeted initially was that the girls fled to safety in the neighbouring settlements, prompting parents to go in desperate but eventually futile search for their embattled wards. Yobe State Police Commissioner Abdulmaliki Sumonu on Tuesday told the media there was thus far no report of any abduction. In the same vein, the spokesman of Operation Lafiya Dole, Colonel Onyema Nwachukwu, was reported saying: “The information so far received is that the principal of the school had dispersed the students on hearing sporadic shooting before the insurgents arrived on the school premises. Many of the students, some of whom are indigenous, had scurried to safety in different directions… but there were cases of looting of food and provisions.”

    No one got more mixed up apparently than the Yobe State Government in whose domain the Dapchi attack did occur, with officials approbating and reprobating on the incident. Education Commissioner Mohammed Lamin initially said it was only after a headcount of the students the government would be able to say “whether any girls were taken.” Soon after, he was reported saying 94 students went missing, out of which 48 had returned. Twenty-eight, according to him, returned on Tuesday night while 20 more returned on Wednesday morning.

    Spokesman for Yobe State Governor, Abdullahi Bego, issued a statement saying 50 missing girls had been unaccounted for even though the Yobe government, according to him, had “no credible information yet as to whether any of the schoolgirls was taken hostage by the terrorists.” Almost too soon thereafter, he issued another statement saying some girls had been “rescued by gallant officers and men of the Nigerian Army from the terrorists who abducted them…(and) are now in the custody of the Nigerian Army.”

    But Yobe Governor Ibrahim Gaidam personally tracked back that claim, as he was reported saying during a visit to Dapchi mid-last week that no girl had been rescued. That, perhaps, informed yet another statement by Bego on Thursday recanting his earlier claim of boisterous rescues by the Army. “We issued the (earlier) statement on the basis of information provided by one of the security agencies that is involved in the fight against Boko Haram, and which we had no reason to doubt. We have now established that the information we relied on to make the statement was not credible,” he said.

    Meanwhile the police have insisted there were no abductions, and yet that as many as 111 girls remained unaccounted for. (Recall that the state government had said 50.) Speaking with journalists in Damaturu, the state capital, Police Commissioner Sumonu was quoted saying: “Eight hundred and fifteen out of 926 students were physically seen in the school as at Tuesday. There are reports that more girls have returned to the school after the headcount… I asked the school principal if there were abductions or deaths in the school and she said no. I am unaware of the rumours going around.”

    It is noteworthy that President Buhari ordered the apparatchik to swiftly take charge of security in Dapchi. That, by all means, was a big leap from the response of former President Jonathan who danced to Azonto vibes in Kano while his principal officials questioned in 2014 that Chibok ever occurred, even on the heels of the incident. Still, the conflicting narratives from Dapchi too closely mirrored the notorious ‘Na only you waka come?… There is God ooo!’ cynicism that dogged the Chibok incident and muddled public view of the magnitude of the security challenge.

    The least we should expect to have been learnt from Chibok is the imperative of harmonising and processing official information and statistical detailing for concerted dissemination. Not only does this assuage public anxiety and reassure persons more directly concerned, like the schoolgirls’ parents, that the government has a firm handle on the threat, it also enhances official transparency and boosts public confidence in remedial capacities of government.

    With all its terrible failings, the Jonathan government made a wobbly attempt at going that route with its belated establishment of a National Information Centre over the Chibok affair. But the centre suffered fatal dysfunction from its manning structure. Still, the basic idea seems deserving of consideration in the present circumstance.

    Also, there are indications of gross failure of security intelligence in the ongoing war against Boko Haramists, never mind claims of major counter-insurgency strides by lynchpins of the present administration including the President. The Dapchi assailants, according to reports of residents’ accounts, invaded the town in more than 18 gun trucks mounted with high caliber weapons, and they lasted a couple of hours with their raid before they were repelled by security forces backed by military jets. The point here is: couldn’t effective intelligence have headed off such large-scale attack or, at least, interrupt it much earlier than was the case in Dapchi?

    Whatever may have become of the ‘safe schools project’ earlier thrown up by the Chibok incident, one urgent imperative from Dapchi until Boko Haram gets finally and effectively vanquished is to relocate all girls schools in the Northeast from remote zones into metropolises that are far more difficult to invade by insurgents.

     

    • Please join me on kayodeidowu.blogspot.be for conversation.
  • DapchiGirls : 110 girls still unaccounted for – Lai Mohammed

    DapchiGirls : 110 girls still unaccounted for – Lai Mohammed

    The Minister of Information, Alhaji Lai Mohammed has said that the Federal Government in collaboration with Yobe State Government will set up a Situation room to coordinate all information and progress report on efforts geared towards the rescue of Dapchi School Girls.

    Alhaji Lai Mohammed who was fielding questions from journalists in Damaturu after a closed door meeting with Governor. Ibrahim Gaidam and other stakeholders on the Dapchi attack, also informed that the Federal Government through the ministry of Interior would ensure the parents of the missing girls get sucour while the search and rescue lasts.

    “Yes, the Federal Government will ensure the parents get succor. The Hon. Minister of Interior made it clear that we will bring succor to the parents but we need to work with the parents, security, state government and everybody. That is why a kind of situation room is being put together now that will comprise of traditional rulers, the parents, local people, representatives of the parents, and all the security agencies,” Alhaji Mohammed said.

    The minister  also disclosed that the Federal government is very serious over the unfortunate incident at  Dapchi, saying, “The fact that the federal government has sent a delegation to Yobe State twice in less than four days underscores the importance the Federal Government  has attached to the unfortunate incident in Dapchi.”

    “We have come here to meet with all the stakeholders, the security outfit, the governor, reps of the parents, Local government Chairman not just to get first hand information of what happen but also to get progress report of what is being done to rescue the girls,” he said.

    Speaking on the actually number of girls that are yet to be accounted for and as to whether there was an abduction, the minister replied; “There is no doubt that the insurgents were in Dapchi and as at today, we cannot account for 110 girls. Because the total register of the students that came to school that day was 906 but as at today(Sunday,25 February, 2018)  about 110 of them cannot be accounted for and that is the situation.

    “But far reaching decision were taken here today: one, is that henceforth, the police and the civil defense corp will ensure that their presence is strong in every school to serve as a deterrent to the insurgents, secondly, the security agencies and outfits are working together and synergizing to ensure that these girls are recovered as fast as possible.

    “ We are working on very important things that would not be very impudent to talk about but we want to assure Nigerians that no stone will be left unturned in our determination to rescue these girls.

    Mohammed explained that his earlier statement in Dapchi on Thursday thatBoko Haram is  looking for ‘oxygen to breath’ is not trivializing the abduction but rather to underscore the major success the government has achieved against the insurgents in the last few years.

    “If we you look at what this government has done in containing the Boko Haram insurgency, you will agree with me that this is actually looking for attention. It is actually more like oxygen. Just one life is very important. We are not making it look trivia but we are just saying that we must remain focused. It is a very huge task and we want to assure Nigerians that the days of Boko Haram is almost at an end,” he explained.

  • Dapchi School Attack: A national disaster – Buhari

    Dapchi School Attack: A national disaster – Buhari

    President Muhammadu Buhari has described the abduction of schoolgirls from the Government Girls Technical College, Dapchi, Yobe, as a national disaster.

    Buhari also apologised to Nigerians over the incident.

    The president said this in a statement issued by his Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Malam Garba Shehu, in Abuja on Friday.

    Buhari assured the families of the victims that no effort would be spared to bring succour to them.

    “When I received the devastating news of the attack on the school and the fact that the local authorities could not account for all the students, I immediately dispatched a high-level delegation on a fact-finding visit to the town.

    “I also instructed the security agencies to deploy in full and not spare any effort to ensure that all the girls are returned safely, and the attackers arrested and made to face justice.

    “The entire country stands as one with the girls’ families, the government and the people of Yobe State.

    “This is a national disaster. We are sorry that this could have happened and share your pain,’’ he said.

    Buhari expressed optimism that the armed forces would locate and safely return the missing girls to their respective families.

    He revealed that more troops and surveillance aircraft were being deployed to the affected area to hasten the rescue of the girls.

    “Our government is sending more troops and surveillance aircraft to keep an eye on all movements in the entire territory on a 24-hour basis, in the hope that all the missing girls will be found,’’ the president said.

    Read Also: DAPCHI: Parents demand release of missing children

    NAN

  • Dapchi school attack getting deserved attention, says Buhari

    Dapchi school attack getting deserved attention, says Buhari

    President Muhammadu Buhari has assured the families of students reportedly abducted from the Government Girls Technical College, Dapchi, Yobe State that no effort will be spared to bring succour to them.

    In a statement by the Senior Special Assistant on Media and publicity, Garba Shehu, the President said “When I received the devastating news of the attack on the school and the fact that the local authorities could not account for all the students, I immediately dispatched a high-level delegation on a fact-finding visit to the town. I also instructed the security agencies to deploy in full and not spare any effort to ensure that all the girls are returned safely, and the attackers arrested and made to face justice.

    “The entire country stands as one with the girls’ families, the government and the people of Yobe State. This is a national disaster. We are sorry that this could have happened and share your pain. We pray that our gallant armed forces will locate and safely return your missing family members.

    “Our government is sending more troops and surveillance aircraft to keep an eye on all movements in the entire territory on a 24-hour basis, in the hope that all the missing girls will be found,” he said.

    Read Also: DAPCHI: Parents demand release of missing children

  • Defence Minister, two others to carry out assessment of Boko Haram attack

    Defence Minister, two others to carry out assessment of Boko Haram attack

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Wednesday directed the military and other security agencies to take immediate charge of the situation in Government Girls Technical College, Dapchi, Yobe State.

    Boko Haram had on Monday attacked the school.

    Briefing State House correspondents after the Federal Executive Council meeting, the Minister of Information, Lai Mohammed, said that the President also directed the Minister to Defence, Mansur Dan-Ali, the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Geoffrey Onyeama, and himself to proceed to Yobe state on Thursday on fact finding mission.

    He said “Mr. President has directed military and other security agencies to take immediate charge and control of Government Girls Technical College, Dapchi, and informed him of developments.

    “He has released a delegation led by the Minister of defence to Dapchi, to get firsthand information as to what is happening.

    “Others in the delegation are Minister of Foreign Affairs and Minister of Information.” he said

    Asked give more information on the girls apart from the 48 that has returned, he said “That is precisely why Mr. President is in direct contact with military and police and as soon as we get any information we will let you know.”

    Read Also: Our experience caring for orphans, widows from boko haram, herdsmen killings-74-yr-old first female medical doctor from North Mary Ogede

  • Update: 50 Dapchi schoolgirls yet to return, says Yobe government

    Update: 50 Dapchi schoolgirls yet to return, says Yobe government

    the Yobe State government on Wednesday said 50 out of 926 Dapchi schoolgirls, whose school was attacked by Boko Haram on Monday have not reported back to school.

    The government doubted whether any of the girls at Government Girls Secondary School in Dapchi,  had been abducted by the attackers, saying there was no credible information to back the story of abduction.

    Abdullahi Bego, Director General on press affairs to the governor in Damaturu said:

    “The Yobe State Government is working with the Nigerian Army and other security and law enforcement agencies to ensure that all students in the school are fully accounted for.

    “As the public is aware, the students were helped by their teachers to escape through the night to the surrounding bush and villages as the terrorists stormed the town last Monday.

    “Out of the 926 students in the school, over 50 are still unaccounted for as of the time of this statement.

    “However, the Yobe State Government has continued to receive information about some of the girls being found in the general area to which they escaped.

    ” The State Government is coordinating with the army and law enforcement agencies to ensure that those girls are returned safely.

    “The Yobe State Government has no credible information yet as to whether any of the schoolgirls was taken hostage by the terrorists.

    The statement said Gov Ibrahim Gaidam was saddened and outraged by the unfortunate event.

    ” The governor has directed that all relevant personnel and agencies work closely with the army and other security organisations to address the situation.

    “The Yobe State Government assures parents and the school community that it will do everything necessary to ensure that all the missing girls are found and returned to their school and families and that security is improved in the area.

  • Yobe rural communities demand water

    Yobe rural communities demand water

    Rural communities selected for construction of 488 water and sanitation facilities in Yobe have appealed to Gov. Ibrahim Gaidam to provide counterpart funds for UNICEF to execute the projects.

    Spokesman of the benefitting communities, Mr Modu Masaba, made the appeal in an interview on Monday in Dapchi.

    Modu said the communities widely celebrated the projects said to be jointly financed by UNICEF, Yobe Government and Bursari Local Government Council.

    “The benefiting communities commend Yobe government for initiating the project and pleading for timely payment of counterpart fund by the state and Bursari local governments for UNICEF to provide its obligation,” Masaba said.

    Read also: Yobe govt reunites 216 deportees from Libya with families

    He said the construction of the water facilities would end the severe water problems faced by the communities and the health challenges of water borne related diseases.

    “If these water facilities are provided, 70 per cent of health problems confronting the rural communities will be solved,” Masaba said.

    Reacting, Alhaji Mohammed Bukar, the General Manager, Yobe Rural  Water Supply and Sanitation Agency ( RUWASSA ), said the project comprise 380 hand pump boreholes, 48 solar powered boreholes and 60 water and sanitation facilities in primary schools and health clinics.

    Also, Alhaji Zanna Abatcha, the Chairman, Dapchi Local Government Council, said the project would be executed under a tripartite agreement between UNICEF, Yobe Government and Bursari council.

    “UNICEF is committing N649.6 million, Yobe state government N263.8 million and Bursari local government council N111.3 million to the water and sanitation facilities in the communities,” the chairman said.

    Zanna assured the preparedness of the state and local government council to meet their financial obligations for successful execution of the projects.

    NAN