Police corporal killed in Borno ambush
A police corporal died and nine others were injured in an ambush on police escorts conveying suspect from Biu Area Command to the State Criminal Investigative Department (CID) in Maiduguri, Borno State.
A security source said the gunmen ambushed the team at Kubuwa in Damboa Local Government Are and opened fire on them. One corporal was killed and nine others were injured.
The injured have been taken to Damboa General Hospital.
The police in Maiduguri, Borno State, have confirmed the death of two persons in a foiled suicide attack close to a mosque at Dalori Quarters on the outskirts of Maiduguri.
A statement by the spokesman Victor Isuku said the suicide bomber and the civilian JTF, who prevented the bomber from entering the mosque died.
The statement reads: “Today, at about 05.22hrs, a male suicide bomber detonated his Improvised Explosive Device (IED) near a mosque at Dalori Quarters on Maiduguri/Konduga/Bama road. A civilian JTF who prevented him from entering the mosque died with the bomber.
“EOD personnel have swept the scene and rendered it safe, while normalcy has returned to the area.”
The National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) also confirmed the death of two people in the attack.
NEMA’s Head of Media and Public Relations, Sani Datti, confirmed the incident.

One aid worker, who asked not to be identified, described the incident as “horrifying” and “a huge setback to humanitarian work in the northeast.”
President Muhammadu Buhari on Wednesday dispatched a team to Maiduguri on condolence visit following accidental bombing of a civilian community in Rann, Borno State, by the Nigerian Air Force.
This was disclosed on the Twitter handle of the Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina.
The incident on Tuesday has left many civilians dead and some of them seriously wounded.
Adesina said that the delegation comprised of Minister for Information, Lai Mohammed, Minister for Defence, Monsur Dan Ali, the Chief of Staff to the President Abba Kyari and service chiefs.
The president had on Tuesday appealed for calm over the accident.
The Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting however could not hold on Wednesday.
While receiving the news of the bombing with sadness and regret, the President had also condoled with families of the dead, wished the wounded divine succour, leading to full recovery, and sympathized with the Borno State government.
He had pledged federal help for the state government in attending to “this regrettable operational mistake,” and pleaded for calm, even as he prayed God to grant repose to the souls of the dead.
International aid agency, MSF, confirmed to BBC that at least 50 person were killed and more than 100 injured in the accident.
The Nigerian Air Force (NAF) had described the incident as unfortunate and highly regrettable.
The Defence Headquarters also expressed shock at the incidence, describing it as a regrettable mistake that would be avoided in future.

Cross the river in a crowd and the crocodile won’t eat you – African proverb
I was part of a delegation of Northern Elders Forum that visited the Borno State capital, Maiduguri, last week. The visit lasted all of one day, but it revealed an entire future that is both inspiring and frightening. The last time a delegation of the Forum visited Maiduguri was about three years ago, and it barely managed to leave the beleaguered city with some dignity because President Jonathan’s State of Emergency order was made on its first day in Maiduguri. There was no such cause for panic this time. The short stay was informed by the challenges of age and conditions of people well past use-before dates, and a loaded programme designed to engage major stakeholders, political and community leaders as well as victims. A day was long enough to see the outlines of a disaster in transition, and enough to judge the progress of communities and a nation through an uncertain future.
Surreal is one way of describing the overall feeling you get when you look deep into the faces and soul of Maiduguri. The city which witnessed the tipping point in the history of the insurgency and then went through six years of agony is bravely attempting to come back to life although the war is far from over, it is stretched beyond imaginable limits with more than one and a half million internally displaced people in homes and camps, the odd suicide bomb goes off now and then, soldiers and other security personnel live on constant alert, neighbours closely scrutinise each other, and the global community attempts to find entry points into one of the biggest humanitarian disasters in recent human history. In this city where families were split into insurgents and victims, or scattered into varied circumstances, there are children who will never know the love of parents. Many did not know electricity until the last two years. Many have spent years out of school or lived under care, or no care at all. Many have seen deaths and other psychologically-traumatising experiences that require intense counselling and other therapies they will never get. Children under 10 in Maiduguri have grown up knowing what bullets and bombs sound like. In 20 years, they will be adults, the people who will determine the way all others live.
Engaging the governor and senior public officials, you get the distinct impression of leaders who believe they have won decisive battles by not surrendering to the insurgency. You see confidence among public officials who could not visit home in towns and villages this time last year, and a few whose towns are still not easily accessible. You see evidence of a leadership made up of Muslims and Christians bonded by the realisation that Boko Haram makes all faiths equal victims. The governor’s confidence belies his recent altercation with NGOs and relief organisations, the challenges of meandering through the forest of federal and state agencies as well as frustrations over the daily struggle to balance current needs of citizens against rebuilding a context for a secure and productive future. The relief over the recent successes of the military campaign in Sambisa forest is palpable, and you get the impression that Borno State people will vote for President Muhammadu Buhari as many times as he will ask for their support. You will not detect a feeling that they feel abandoned, but the leadership and citizens of Borno are quick to appreciate gratitude for even token gestures that assure them that they are not alone as they walk away from a murderous insurgency into a future full of challenges.
The spectacle of dignified splendour around the Shehu of Bornu barely conceals the reality that this ancient civilisation has been traumatised and squeezed into Maiduguri by an insurgency whose origin and development it disowns at every opportunity. The Shehu’s empire substantially hangs around his palace, with subordinates chased out of palaces, while government offices, schools, hospitals, basic social and economic infrastructure, homes, mosques and churches have all largely been destroyed. If you thought the Shehu’s assertion that Borno will rise again was conjured bravado, you are forced into doubt as you see hundreds of young people outside his palace watching a football match, the number of young people who run towards any siren to raise clenched fists in greetings and adulation, or the number of school children (including, significantly, school-age girls) who squeeze through heavy traffic to go to school, or the relaxed faces on streets even when no one is certain that the next person may not be concealing a bomb.
The faces of resistance are represented in elders and elite who have stayed behind to resist this assault either because they have no choice or because they chose to risk staying put in Maiduguri. It is also represented by the mostly young Civilian JTF, that precocious group that forced its way into a war, making the difference by exposing relations, neighbours and suspects, providing an invaluable compass in the fight and paying a very high price for its effort. Borno Elders Forum serves as the voice and vanguard of the community, often irritating or serially annoying authority at all levels by its insistence that there are right ways of dealing with security challenges and the rights and dignity of citizens. These elders paid their dues to the Nigerian state at many levels, and they will not abandon the belief that it is possible to re-engineer a Nigeria with Borno as a pillar.
In the Northeast generally, and in Borno State in particular, everyone speaks in statistics. You will hear that there are over 2m IDPs in the region, only 10 per cent of whom live in camps. The numbers increase literally by the day, as the military dislodge more insurgents and free captive populations. There are anywhere between fifty and one hundred thousand young orphans, a curious phenomenon in an African context until you are reminded that no one has the space or resources to give them a home. Many of the IDPs are children or relations of insurgents who are shunned with such vehemence, they require special protection. More than half of school-age children have not been to school in the last five years. Ninety per cent of the IDPs living with families receive no assistance, nor do their host families. Their future depends largely on when towns and villages can be secured, when basic infrastructures including houses are rebuilt and when the means of production are made available. The statistics relating to poverty levels, malnourishment, juvenile delinquency, crimes and vulnerability of women and children and even the possibility of the prolongation or mutation of the insurgency can safely be marked up in the next few months, even with increased support, coordination and resources. The .2m IDPs who will be released into the population if the Government of Borno State goes ahead with its plans to close down all IDP camps in May this year, will pose additional problems for security and victims’ management.
Maiduguri is the epicentre of devastation, the magnitude of which the nation is yet to fully grasp. At this stage, only a few things are certain: the resolve of the government of Nigeria to degrade the insurgency to a point where it is no longer a credible threat; the determination of the leaders and the communities in the Northeast to claw their ways into a rebuilt future; the determination of international relief and humanitarian organisations and friendly nations and many Nigerian NGOs to sustain the difficult tasks of reaching the vulnerable and the needy; and finally, a hugely uncertain future for millions of people in Nigeria and neighbouring countries. The pace and tempo of the military campaign must be sustained and matched by parallel efforts at rehabilitation, reintegration and reconstruction. In the last few months, the Federal Government has made improvements in the manner it coordinates activities of governments and agencies involved in managing a major humanitarian disaster. Still, the domestication of the Kampala Declaration will vastly improve the legal and policy framework for protecting and assisting IDPs. The people of Borno, Yobe and Adamawa states and many parts of the North have lived with a nightmare for many years. Even if the insurgency is comprehensively defeated soon, this will only mark the beginning of another long and tasking challenge to rebuild lives and livelihoods. In Maiduguri, we saw signs among the population that there is hope for a safe and secure future. It is not just their future, because every Nigerian lives in Maiduguri.

The Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) in Borno State has said it discovered “Countdown Timers” used by Boko Haram terrorists to detonate explosives.
Commandant Ibrahim Abdullahi stated this yesterday in an interview with News Agency of Nigeria (NAN).
Abdullahi said the instruments were discovered by men of the Disaster Management Unit on the scene of Sunday’s blast in Kalari area of Maiduguri.
“The digital timer countdown allows the suicide bomber know the time to explode his Improvised Explosive Device (IED).
“Since we now know what they are using, security agencies would trace the roots of where these gadgets come from.
“To this end, we appeal to people to be vigilant and proactive in their respective environment. They should also assist the security agencies with relevant information to nip Boko Haram activities and other crimes in the bud,” Abdullahi said.
Many persons were reportedly feared dead on Saturday night in Maiduguri, Borno State capital following a bomb blast.
The blast occurred in the Custom area, opposite Sanda Kyarimi Primary School which is close to the Immigration office.
Details of the incident is still sketchy at press time.

Leaders and sector commanders of the Civilian Joint Task Force (CJTF), a group of closely vigilantes fighting Boko Haram, have been lectured on Human Rights Education (HRE) by activist, Philip Obaji.
Fifteen top members of the group including the acting chairman, Bashehu Abdulganiyu, and secretary, Babagana Usman, participated in an introductory session facilitated by Obaji in Maiduguri, the capital of Nigeria’s north-eastern Borno state. A full training program for the same participants will be held in 2017.
“For today, we just wanted them to understand what Human Rights Education is about and the importance of building a culture of human right,” Obaji said. “Next year, there will be a full training program aimed at building their capacity to carry out effective human rights education within their group.”
Next year’s training program which will be facilitated by Obaji, will be based on the Learning Spiral model, which integrates both content and process through the use of a participatory approach. The model will provide participants with the opportunity to practice their skills in the learning context in order to apply them in action.
The emphasis throughout the Program will be on critical analysis, reflection, and practical application leading to the development of strategies for future action.
Obaji, who will be the program facilitator, is an alumnus of the International Centre for Human Rights Education (EQUITAS), Montreal, Canada. He is known for his activism for rights to education for children, especially in north-eastern Nigeria where a 7-year-old insurgency has led to the conscription and abuse of thousands of kids both by Boko Haram and the CJTF.
The 31-year-old author is the winner of the 2014 Future Awards Africa Prize in Education, and the 2015 Future Awards Africa Prize for Young Person of the Year. Early this year he was listed among 100 most influential Nigerians by internet newspaper, YNaija.

Surgical teams from the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) have treated 90 people wounded in the Maiduguri and Madagali bomb blasts.
Dr Hashemi Padshah, ICRC Health Coordinator in Nigeria, made the disclosure in a statement made available to journalists, on Tuesday in Yola.
“An ICRC surgical team, together with surgeons from Michika General Hospital, treated 76 victims of the blast in Madagali market.
“Another ICRC surgical team treated 15 people injured in Maiduguri on Sunday morning,” he said.
Padshah said that the Red Cross currently has two surgical teams in the country which had so far treated over 1,800 patients in the north-east within the year.
He said that the ICRC was assisting 16 primary health-care centres and nine mobile clinics by providing them with primary health care services for internally displaced persons, returnees and other residents in the north-east
He said that 436,000 patients had so far been attended to.
The coordinator said that within the year, 13,000 children under five suffering from malnutrition were treated while 15,500 babies were delivered in ICRC-supported clinics.

The National Emergency Management Agency(NEMA) has confirmed that only the suicide bombers that attacked the Maiduguri Monday Market on Sunday morning lost their lives in the process.
The Director of Public Affairs and Information of NEMA Sani Datti in a statement said the two bombers, male and female got killed in an attempt to wreck havoc on the ever bustling market which is located at the heart of Maiduguri metropolis.
The statrment also noted that 17 people have been injured and evacuated Maduguri Specialist hospital for adewuate operation as rescue wirkers and security personal have moved in the clear the scene.
The statement read: “A male and female suicide bomber have detonated explosives near Monday market maiduguri this morning. Rescue workers at scene.
“only the suicide bombers lost their lives while 17 persons were injured and evacuated to the Specialist Hospital Maiguduri”.
Maiduguri Monday market has suffered nemerous bomb and suicide attacks during the peak of Book Haram activities in Maiduguri claiming hundreds of lives.
Abba Jato, an attendant at one of the filling stations at the Post Office area of Maiduguri said the sound of the explosion shook every building around the area.
“We heard a loud bang and every building around shook to foundation but because we are used to these kind of things, I knew its a bomb blast. I cannot tell how many people were affected now because the Police and red Cross with NEMA people were there. I saw three ambulances running to the area,” Jato said.