Tag: Militant

  • A’Ibom coastal communities seek protection of ex–militants from pirates

    A’Ibom coastal communities seek protection of ex–militants from pirates

    Five coastal local government areas in Akwa Ibom State are seeking protection from ex-militants against sea pirates and other violent criminal elements.

    The local government areas are Oron, Udung Uko, Mbo, Okobo and Urue-Offong Oruko.

    The President-General of Oro Union, Sir Essang Nsa Bassey in a briefing at the weekend, lamented the menace of sea pirates in Oro Nation.

    Bassey appealed to the State and  Federal governments to allow ex-militants support security agencies in combating sea pirates in Oro Nation.

    “Just like the federal government engaged Government Ekpemupolo, alias Tompolo, the Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of the Tantita firm, to police the waterways of Niger Delta against pipeline vandals and oil thieves on high seas, the same should be done in Akwa Ibom state.

    “I recall that ex-militants from the state particularly the ones from Oron federal constituency approached me and suggested that they should be allowed to combat the menace of sea pirates in our waters.

    “I think the state government can use them to protect  our maritime corridor from these criminals who have made life unbearable for us.

    “If this is not done, the blue economy potentials will remain a mirage. Therefore, we are appealing to the Federal and state governments to think towards this”, he said.

    The President-General of Oro Union also decried the alleged marginalisation of the Oro by successive administrations in state.

    “Successive administrations in the state have robbed Oro people of development  over the years in terms of strategic infrastructure and key projects, especially the major Uyo – Nsit Atai road travesing into Oro.

    Such politics of exclusion, he noted, could be seen in failure of both the State and Federal Governments to effectively implement the Ibaka Deep seaport project, whose original status and nomenclature had been altered to become Ibom Deep seaport.

  • ‘We’ve degraded militant, Badoo groups in Lagos’

    Lagos State Police Commissioner Imohimi Edgal said yesterday the activities of Badoo cult, hitherto prevalent in Ikorodu, and militancy in riverine communities, had been degraded.

    Speaking at the inaugural edition of the Lagos State Security Summit, at Eko Hotels and Suites, Victoria Island, he said following the assistance to security forces by the government through donation and funding, crime rate had declined.

    Edgal, who reviewed the  crime statistics, said from 2014 to date, 1,315 robberies, 359 cult-related cases and 392 kidnappings were recorded, with arrests made and prosecutions ongoing.

    He said following community policing and security partnership, militants had been degraded and incapacitated.

    The commissioner said the policy helped in stopping cults, such as Badoo, with their shrines demolished, adding that from January to date, no attack had been recorded from the militants.

    He said: “In comparison, when I became Commissioner of Police last September, I introduced policing plan powered by the strategy and philosophy of community policing and community safety partnership.

    “Policing as we all know is more about strategy and technology, but there are other factors that come to play, such as logistics and all that. But when there is a clear-cut strategy backed with the right technology, then the war against crime will be won.

    “Based on the partnership with the security outfits within our communities, we have brought the activities of Badoo cult to an end and discovered suspected shrines in Ikorodu and its environs used for ritual killings and other crimes. These shrines have been demolished.”

    Edgal said to the command, under his watch, had leveraged on goodwill with the government and the public to keep the state safe.

    He said 15 town hall meetings were organised for him to meet members of communities, noting that the issue of trust featured, while in response, a complaint call centre was established where people could petition on issues of misconduct by officers.

    “This has helped to rekindle the confidence of the public in the police.”

    The police boss called for increased manpower and a system to stop the practice whereby people spread fears through social media, as well as a legislation to compel organisations to install CCTV cameras on their premises.

    He advocated the deepening of intelligence-led policing, involvement of traditional rulers in security architecture and investment in training of security personnel to bring about efficiency.

    Governor Akinwunmi Ambode advocated the concept of collective vigilance whereby stakeholders in security management would have defined roles and relationships to stay ahead of crimes, such as terrorism, cyber and transnational organised crimes.

    He said the concept had become imperative following the vulnerability of the state to security threats due to influx of foreigners and people to Lagos.

    The governor said: “There is need to examine the concept of collective vigilance in a mega-city security system in which stakeholders have properly defined roles and relationships from the primary level of community security initiatives to tertiary levels.’’

    Ambode, represented by the Chairman of the Security Trust Fund, Mr. Oye Hassan-Odukale, said since assumption of office, his administration had implemented its cardinal programmes built on the tripod of security, infrastructural development and poverty alleviation through employment generation, adding that the policy had been yielding fruits.

    Describing the theme,  “Securing Lagos State: Towards a Sustainable Framework for Modern Mega City,” as apt, the governor said it was designed to deliberate and chart a course to resolve and improve on security in Lagos and the need to expand the security architecture to deal with challenges of the future.

  • Army raids militant camp, uncovers human skulls

    Army raids militant camp, uncovers human skulls

    The Nigerian Army says it recovered from militant camp in Omoko, Ogba-Egbema-Ndoni Local Government Area of Rivers, cache of arms and seven decomposed human skulls.

    Col. Aminu Iliyasu, Spokesman of 6 Division in Port Harcourt told newsmen on Tuesday that five males and two females were arrested at the camp.

    Iliyasu alleged that some militants and their fleeing leader, Don Wanny, kidnapped and killed several innocent citizens in Rivers and Bayelsa states.

    The spokesman listed weapons recovered from the camp as two AK 47 rifles, one General Purpose Machine Gun, 18 AK 47 magazines, three FN rifle magazines, 39 7.62mm Nato ammunition and 20 9mm ammunition.

    Others, he said were 7.62 mm ammunition, five Icom and Mag hand-held radios, two 25kg bags of cannabis, nine pairs of military camouflage, 10 human skulls and several bones.

    According to him, the raid is part of renewed strategy by the division to restore law and order in Omoku which has been terrorised by criminals for long.

    “On Monday, we received a tip-off, and thereafter, troops raided the camp and shrines of a notorious militant, cultist, kidnapper and an ardent oil thief popularly known as Don Wanny.

    “After about an hour of gun fight, our troops overpowered the criminal elements due to superior fire power that sent the criminals scampering for safety,” he said.

    Iliyasu said some of the alleged criminals, who sustained gunshot wounds escaped by jumping into Orashi River in the area.

    “However, seven of the suspects including two ladies were arrested, while they attempted to escape in the encounter that occurred at about 2:35 a.m. on Monday.

    “It is believed that the main culprit, Don Wanny was not at the location during the encounter but concerted efforts are on to track, arrest and bring him to justice,” he said.

    Iliyasu thanked residents of the area for cooperating with security agencies and urged them to continue to provide timely information that would lead to arrest of criminals in the state and its environs.

    NAN

  • Southwest governors  set to tackle militants

    Southwest governors set to tackle militants

    SOUTHWEST governors are set to tackle militants who have made seaside communities unsafe.

    The governors of the six Southwest States of Lagos, Ogun, Oyo, Ondo, Osun and Ekiti are to meet in Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital next Monday.

    They are to deliberate on measures to tackle the increasing challenges posed by the militants.

    According to the Secretary to the Ogun State Government, Taiwo Adeoluwa, some of the thematic areas to be discussed include: “export development initiatives for the Western region, security, in view of the current contemporary unwholesome activities of some criminal elements parading themselves as militants now ravaging parts of the region.”

    The meeting, being convened under aegis of the South West Governors’ Forum, would also afford the governors opportunity to discuss the security of the zone “in view of the current contemporary unwholesome activities of some criminal elements parading themselves as militants now ravaging parts of the region.”

    In a statement, the SSG stated that the meeting would also evaluate the key areas of cooperation for the unity, progress and development of the region as well as collaboration that would engender good governance.

  • Why new militant groups are springing up —Ex-militant leader

    THE proliferation of militant groups in the Niger Delta has been described as another illicit business avenue being exploited by shady characters within the oil-rich Niger Delta region.

    A former militant leader, who spoke with The Nation in Warri yesterday preferring anonymity, said those behind the almost confusing rise in the number of militant groups in the region are those who had sensed that the situation might result in the sort of environment that gave birth to the amnesty programme initiated by the Musa-Yar’adua administration. “Before the two-week ultimatum from the federal government to the bombers, there was a little silence among them. But the guys felt that the dialogue might bring the kind of largesse of 2007.

    “They believe that there might be another amnesty, so they want to key into the dialogue so that at the end of the day, they can benefit like they did in 2009. “But I think the aim of the actual bombers, the Niger Delta Avengers, their target is higher than financial benefits because they are not strangers. They are old fighters who were used and abandoned in the previous amnesty.

    “They have seen their mistakes and lapses in the previous struggle. I think they aim at two things: freedom for Niger Delta or they make Nigeria ungovernable for the current government. “The struggle is in different stages. There was a time it was in club, cutlasses and spares. It graduated to dane guns and from dane guns to rifles and from riffles to what you call the general purpose machine guns, rocket launchers and all that.

  • Police arrest militant leaders in Ogun

    The Police have arrested four leaders of a militant group behind attacks and damaging of facilities belonging to Pipelines and Product Marketing Company (PPMC) / Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) in Arepo,  Ogun State.

    The suspects –  Pere Ugbozuwa, Audu Tony, Ifeanyi Eze and Ojogo Ezekiel – were apprehended during a special operation coordinated by Commissioner of Police Abdulmajid Ali.

    Police spokesman Olumuyiwa Adejobi, who said this in statement yesterday, stated that Ugbozuwa(40), who is the secretary of the militants and three others, were already being interrogated at the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) in Abeokuta.

    Adejobi said the suspects, who had given out vital information, were responsible for killings, damaging of PPMC/NNPC pipelines and criminal acts at Arepo for years.

    According to him, Ogun State Police Command had deployed operatives from the Special Anti-Robbery Squad, Police Mobile Force, Safer Highway and other anti-crime units to tackle hoodlums in the creek of Arepo with two Armoured Personnel Carriers (APC).

    He said the operatives were deployed last Friday.

    Other vandals arrested included Olamilekan Akinyemi and Ramon Mudashiru.

    They were apprehended near the Mountain of Fire and Miracles Ministry, on Lagos – Ibadan Expressway on Saturday with a Ford bus, marked LAGOS MUS 887 XF, loaded with 14 pieces of 200 litre drums and several jerry cans of petrol.

  • Centre urges review of Amnesty for ex-militants

    THE Centre for Peace and Environment Justice (CEPEJ) has called for the review of the amnesty granted ex-militants in the Niger Delta.

    The organisation said the training for the ex-militants should have factored in the remediation of the environment devastated by years of militancy, illegal bunkering and oil exploration activities.

    CEPEJ’s National Coordinator Sheriff Mulade, spoke at a a review of the amnesty programme to train the former warlords on how they can help clean the environment destroyed by attacks on oil facilities.

    He said: “The Federal Government should review the amnesty programme with inclusion of Environmental Remediation Taskforce to engage trained youths as this will help to solve issue of unemployment.

    “We have observed that the Presidential Amnesty Programme for Niger Delta youths addresses capacity building through training and re-integration, without capability. It fails to tackle the fundamental issues of underdevelopment as well as environment pollution and degradation caused by the reckless activities of multinational oil companies, illegal bunkering and oil theft.

    “It is regrettable that over the years, oil pollution had destroyed farmlands, waterways and various sources of drinkable water, thereby impoverishing the local people and affecting their socio-economic well being. Also cases of oil spillage recorded were not handled in a satisfactory manner by oil companies and relevant government agencies.

    “We are calling on the Federal Government, especially the Special Adviser to the president on Niger Delta Affairs, Kingsley Kuku, to set up an Environmental Remediation Taskforce to critically address this environmental challenge through the Federal Government’s laudable programme, as well as take proactive steps to monitor oil spillage and cleanup activities in the Niger Delta.”

    Mulade said the majority of unrest and criminalities taking place in the region are the handiwork of unemployed trained ex-militants, who have not been gainfully engaged since returning from training.

    He disclosed that CEPEJ, in collaboration with the Bayelsa State government, was organising a two-day annual peace and environment seminar with the theme “Towards Eradicating Environmental Threats and Sea Piracy Challenges in Africa”.

    Mulade said the seminar would address fundamental issues, such as crude oil theft and illegal refineries, illegal mining, kidnapping and marine piracy, as well as other environmental challenges in Africa.

    He added that the forum would facilitate policy and dialogue among key stakeholders in the environment sector on how best to promote innovations to meet environmental best practices.

    Among the speakers to deliver papers at the event are the Minister of Environment, Hajia Hadiza Mailafia; the Deputy Minister of Environment, Science, Technology & Innovation, Ghana, Dr. (Mrs.) Bernice Heloo; Prof. Moses Montesh of the College of Law, University of South Africa, Pretoria and other renowned academics from within and outside Nigeria.

     

     

  • Attack underscores strength of militant group

    Attack underscores strength of militant group

    Members of the Boko Haram militant group allegedly stormed a military compound and prison in northeastern Nigeria this week, killing dozens and freeing more than 100 prisoners. The coordinated attack is the latest in a series of violent assaults that have taken place since war broke out in 2009 between the extremist Islamist group and the Nigerian military, and observers say neither side shows sign of deescalating.

    “Heavily armed Boko Haram terrorists” launched the attack, which killed prison guards, policemen, soldiers, and civilians, according to Musa Sagir, the military spokesman in Maiduguri. According to Agence France-Presse, the militants were reportedly wearing military uniforms during the attack.

    This week’s violence follows closely on the heels of what Human Rights Watch called an “unprecedented” attack in April in the town of Baga. Some 200 people were estimated killed and thousands of homes were destroyed.

    Nigeria, Africa’s most populous country, is majority Christian in the south and Muslim in the north. The militants’ name, Boko Haram, translates literally as “Western education is a sin,” and according to The Christian Science Monitor, there are other divides between north and south Nigeria that may play a role in Boko Haram’s staying power.

    It’s estimated that 70 percent of Nigerians live on less than $1.25 a day, but poverty is more prevalent up north (far from Nigeria’s oil fields and agricultural areas). Some 75 percent of northerners live in poverty, compared with 27 percent of southerners. The great disparity between haves and have-nots, between north and south, appears to be one major draw for recruitment….

    The International Institute for Strategic Studies said in a recent report that “the extent of the violence (since 2009) showed that Boko Haram was capable of mobilizing thousands of people and was better trained and armed than government forces had thought.”

    The group has said its goal is to create an Islamic state in the country’s north.

    Nigeria has suffered close to 4,000 fighting-related deaths – perpetrated by both Boko Haram and the military – since 2009, reports The New York Times. A recent report by the Times notes that despite the brutal attacks said to be carried out by the militant group, on any given day, scores of bodies of suspected Boko Haram members are brought into the military hospital.

    The corpses were those of young men arrested in neighborhood sweeps by the military and taken to a barracks nearby. Accused, often on flimsy or no evidence, of being members or supporters of Boko Haram … the detainees are beaten, starved, shot and even suffocated to death, say the officials, employees and witnesses….

    The military’s harsh tactics, which it flatly denies, have reduced militant attacks in this insurgent stronghold, but at huge cost and with likely repercussions, officials and rights advocates contend.

    No one doubts that Boko Haram, which has claimed responsibility for assassinations and bombings that have killed officials and civilians alike, is thoroughly enmeshed in the local populace, making the job of extricating the group extremely difficult. But as with other abuses, the bodies piling up at the morgue — where it is often impossible to distinguish combatants from the innocent — have turned many residents against the military, driving some toward the insurgency, officials say.

    In late April, President Goodluck Jonathan set up a committee to explore the ideas of amnesty for the insurgents and discuss compensation for victims of Boko Haram violence, according to the Council on Foreign Relations.

    “All Nigerians are expecting this Committee to perform magic and I pray that Allah should give you the wisdom to do so because without peace we cannot develop,” President Jonathan said, referring to the Presidential Committee on Dialogue and Peaceful Resolution of Security Challenges in the North.

    Not all Nigerians are hopeful the “magic” will be delivered.

    [But] there are many Nigerians who believe that this impending amnesty is a repetition of an error; an action that may, in the immediate future and in the long run, prove to be harmful to the country! Amnesty is a double-edged sword of a sort; it is as much a tonic as it is an elixir!

    John Campbell from CFR notes, however, that “even if the prospects for success are low, as defined by the modalities, the Committee is an important step forward.

    “It is a first step toward addressing the insurgency in the North by political means, rather than with a hammer. It also may create space for more political and civil society engagement in peacebuilding in the North. Jonathan even urged the Committee to make suggestions as to how the “underlying causes” of the insurgency could be addressed to prevent similar outbreaks in the future.”

    •Source: The Christian Science Monitor

  • JTF captures militant camp after bloody shootout

    JTF captures militant camp after bloody shootout

    •Militants ‘raze’ buildings, threaten more bloodshed

    The Joint Task Force (JTF) in the Niger Delta, codenamed ‘Operation Pulo Shield’, has captured a militant camp, allegedly being rebuilt by a faction of the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND) in Warri, Delta State.

    The camp was destroyed after a gunfight between the militants and troops of the 19 Battalion attached to the JTF in Koko, headquarters of Warri North Local Government.

    One of the armed youths was arrested while some people were feared dead.

    A former leader of MEND in the area, ‘General’ Ezekiel Akpasibowei aka Egbema 1, told our reporter that the camp was operated by criminals and disgruntled politicians, who wanted more control of the local government and access to unhindered illegal bunkering operations.

    He said the group was also responsible for criminal activities, including attacks on expectant mothers and children.

    “As the leader of this area, we do not have militants; what we have are criminals posing as agitators. All the genuine militants have undergone non-violence training.”

    He said the group had fingered him and prominent Ijaw youth leaders in the area for elimination, stressing that they invaded a Zion (village) in Egbema clan on Monday night and razed three buildings, including those of Apostle Sunny Jero, Vice Chairman of Egbema Gbaramatu Development Foundation.

    That report could not be independently confirmed by our reporter.

    Security sources said the directive to storm the camp came from the highest authority in the Armed Forces.

    “The top military officers are worried that the region could be slipping back into militancy, criminality and all sorts of vices.

    “We cannot allow this at a time we are battling Boko Haram in the North”, our source added.

    It was gathered that the ammunition and explosives were recovered from the camp, which was rigged with explosives and various booby traps.

    The clash came on the heels of a fresh crisis in the Southern Ijaw and Nember areas of neighboring Bayelsa State, which led to the killing of 12 policemen and abduction of at least nine oil workers in the past few days.

    The Commanding Officer, 19 Brigade of Sector 1, Lt. Col Frank Etim, said troops moved in obedience to a directive from the topmost echelon of the military.

    He said prior to the Sunday clash, troops of the Task Force had intelligence report on the presence of the camp in Adagbrasa/Itagbene area of Warri North Local Government.

    However, Lt. Col. Etim said operators of the camp were responsible for the abduction of three workers of the oil surveillance team on routine duty on the Benin River.

    He said the group behind the camp had been involved in kidnapping, political upheaval, oil bunkering, sea piracy and blockade of the Benin River.

    Speaking on how the camp was captured, the top army officer said the militants set several traps, including felling heavy logs on the waterways to evade arrest and to enable them escape.

    Etim said the camp was eventually set ablaze after hours of sporadic gun battle between troops and the militants in the creek.

     

  • Pakistan militant leader ‘killed’

    Senior Pakistani militant leader Mullah Nazir has been killed by a United States drone strike, security officials told The BBC.

    He died with at least five fighters when two missiles struck his vehicle in the north-west tribal district of South Waziristan, they said.

    He was the leader of one of four major militant factions in Pakistan, accused of sending fighters to back the Afghan Taliban and fight foreign troops there.

    Mullah Nazir was wounded in a suicide bomb attack in November.

    Wednesday night’s drone strike targeted Mullah Nazir, reportedly as he and his fighters prepared to swap to a new vehicle after his pick-up developed a fault.

    It took place in Angoor Adda, near South Waziristan’s main town of Wana, close to the Afghan border.

    Reports say Mullah Nazir’s deputy, Ratta Khan, was also killed in the attack.

    Officials also said four militants were killed in a separate attack in North Waziristan, but their identities are not known.