Tag: military

  • Military tackles Rep over Dapchi girls’ whereabouts

    Military tackles Rep over Dapchi girls’ whereabouts

    Youths: act on lawmaker’s tip

    The military has dismissed the claim that the 110 abducted Dapchi girls are in Yobe State.

    A top officer, who pleaded for anonymity, last night described Hon Goni Bukar and other politicians/activists speaking on the whereabouts of the girls and the identity of their abductors as “a bunch of confusionists”.

    “If they know where the girls are, they know what to do, instead of staying somewhere in Damaturu or Abuja and claiming that the girls are somewhere within Yobe State or anywhere else.

    “This is how some of these politicians will stay in Abuja and will be granting interviews to you media people, claiming this and that, yet they are not anywhere near their constituencies.

    “I have been in Maiduguri since Tuesday and all the nation’s top military and security brass have been in Maiduguri and Yobe axis, pursuing all the leads. The investigations are not only on-going, painstaking and multi-dimensional, but what I can tell you now is that we are not leaving any stone unturned.”

    The source challenged Hon. Bukar, a member of the House of Representatives representing Yunusari/Gaidam Federal Constituency, to present himself before the military and security outfits for a journey to Bulabulin or any other place where the girls could have been taken by the terrorists. He said Nigerians should beware of people with such “wild claims”.

    He also called on Nigerians to be patient with the military in their resolve to bring the girls back home, saying within the next few days, the nation would be briefed on the matter.

    The Defence Headquarters at the weekend gave a hint of its battle to rescue the girls.

    A statement signed by Acting Director of Defence Information Brig.-Gen John Agim said: “The Chief of Defence Staff, General Abayomi Gabriel Olonisakin and the Service Chiefs with the Director General, Department of State Service met in Maiduguri yesterday, 1st March 2018 to review the ongoing operations in the Northeast, particularly the operation to get back the Dapchi girls.

    “Even though the military is soliciting for useful information to facilitate its operations, the fishermen and farmers have not been singled out for this assistance; rather, all well-meaning members of the public are urged to provide useful information.”

     

  • Boko Haram attack Rann, kill UNICEF doctor, eight others

    Boko Haram attack Rann, kill UNICEF doctor, eight others

    Not fewer than eight security personal were killed Friday after a deadly Boko Haram attack on a military and police location in Rann, Kala Balge Local Government of Borno State.

    Though there is no confirmation yet from the military and police authorities in Borno state, a senior security official told our correspondent that a doctor working with the UNICEF clinic, including other aid workers could have been killed in the attack.

    The attack which was carried out by heavily armed Boko Haram terrorists also carted away with some military gun trucks.

    In Yobe State, Police have confirmed a suicide attack at a mosque at fulatari area  in Buni-Yadi, Gujba Local government area.

    The Nation gathered that the bomber, female killed herself and injured two others at  5:30am muslim prayers.

    Commissioner of Police Abdulmalik Sunmonu confirmed the attack, saying his men have reported the incident to him, “One person who tried to block the suicide bomber is injured but receiving treatment “, he said.

    Buni Yadi has not witnessed any serious attack since its liberation in 2015.

    A local source disclosed that the teenage bomber attempted to enter the mosque when a worshiper tried to stop her.

    Read Also:Nigeria, Cameroon troops kill 35 Boko Haram insurgents

  • Military rescues 84, recovers weapons

    Military rescues 84, recovers weapons

    At least 84 people have been rescued and heavy military weapons recovered from Boko Haram fighters by Nigerian army.

    The Army said on Saturday that the breakthrough was recorded during an operation in Borno State.

    A total of 84 persons held hostage by the insurgents at Camp Zairo were rescued by the troops and have been handed over to the Borno State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA).

    The Theatre Commander of Operation Lafiya Dole, Major General Rogers Nicholas, that some of the women rescued were found to be pregnant while the children among them looked malnourished.

    The 84 persons were flown by the Air Component of the Operation Lafiya Dole to Maiduguri, the state capital after being freed from the heavily guarded camp.

    Major General Rogers Nicholas, who handed the victims over to SEMA, said most of them are tasting freedom for the first time in about three years after their abduction.

    The Nigerian Army has revealed another breakthrough recorded during an operation in which a military tank and other weapons were recovered from the Boko Haram terrorists in Borno State.

    A total of 84 persons held hostage by the insurgents at Camp Zairo were rescued by the troops and have been handed over to the Borno State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA).

    According to him, some of the women rescued were found to be pregnant while the children among them looked malnourished.The Theatre Commander of Operation Lafiya Dole, Major General Rogers Nicholas, disclosed this on Saturday to reporters in the state.

    The 84 persons were flown by the Air Component of the Operation Lafiya Dole to Maiduguri, the state capital after being freed from the heavily guarded camp.

    Weapons seized from fighters

    Major General Rogers Nicholas, who handed the victims over to SEMA, said most of them are tasting freedom for the first time in about three years after their abduction.

    At least 26 Boko Haram members surrendered to the military authorities in Damboa Local Government Area of Borno State earlier in the week.

    The ‘repentant’ terrorists were paraded on Friday in Maiduguri, the Borno State capital after they were quizzed by the military.

    They were said to have surrendered last week and turned over their arms and ammunition including RPGs, after which they were taken to Maiduguri for deradicalizsation.

    More than 2300 fighters have surrendered in the last 13 months following intensive military action and seizure of the Sambisa forest, the main enclave of the insurgents.

    More than 25,000 people have been killed in the insurgency since 2009 and at least 2.4 million Nigerians displaced in the northeast states of Adamawa, Yobe and Borno.

    Meanwhile, the Army has confirmed it would conduct more exercises in 2018 to assist civil authorities to deal with internal security challenges in parts of the country.

    The Chief of Army Staff, Lt.-Gen. Tukur Buratai, said on Friday after leading troops on a 15km Route March.

    Buratai said exercises `Harbin Kunama III, Crocodile Smile III and Egwu Eke Dance III would also be conducted in 2018.

    Exercise Harbin Kunama I and II were conducted in 2016 and 2017, respectively, to deal with the menace of cattle rustling and herdsmen/farmers clashes in parts of North-West and North-Central.

  • Nasarawa killings: Miyetti Allah wants FG to deploy military to border towns

    Nasarawa killings: Miyetti Allah wants FG to deploy military to border towns

    The Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association of Nigeria (MACBAN), Nasarawa State Chapter, has called for the deployment of military to border towns between Nasarawa and Benue, to curtail the incessant attacks on the area.

    MACBAN’s state chairman, Mohammed Hussaini, who made the call in an interview with newsmen on Saturday, said measure would bring the situation under control.

    He attributed the spill over of the attacks and killings in border towns to the anti open grazing law being enforced by the Benue Government.

    “Since this thing started, we have been under attacks by armed militia groups, in which lots of our people were killed, some are still missing.

    “A lot of cows belonging to our members were killed and many other rustled in some of these attacks.

    “The lives of our members are also being threatened in all the border towns; so the federal government should come to our aid by deploying the military to the affected areas,” he said.

    Hussaini said the security agencies should investigate and arrest the criminal elements responsible for the attacks and bring them to justice.

    He noted that there were criminal elements in every tribe, and cautioned against the quick generalization tribes when a crime was committed.

    “A criminal is a criminal whether he or she is Igbo, Hausa, Eggon or Fulani, but why generalize the Fulanis when some of them commit any crime?” he asked.

    He blamed the media for its antagonistic reports on Fulanis, saying “ these are some of the factors that fuel crisis”.

    The Chairman commended the Nasarawa state government and heads of security agencies in the state for the proactive steps they took in handling security matters. (NAN)

  • Military, AI rejects over alleged killing of 35 Adamawa villagers

    Military, AI rejects over alleged killing of 35 Adamawa villagers

    Amnesty International (AI) in a report published yesterday accused the Nigerian military of killing thirty five villagers in Adamawa State.

    But, the Nigerian Air Force NAF faulted the report.

    According to AI, dozens of villagers were killed and many more injured, when the military on the 4th of December 2017 launched an airstrike on villages being attacked by Fulani herdsmen.

    The organisation, in its report, ‘the military used deadly force’ and video titled ‘why did the Nigerian Air Force do the unthinkable?’.

    AI said: “The Nigerian authorities’ response to communal violence is totally inadequate, too slow and ineffective, and in some cases unlawful, Amnesty International said today, as clashes between herdsmen and farmers in Adamawa, Benue, Taraba, Ondo and Kaduna have resulted in 168 deaths in January 2018 alone.

    “The government must totally overturn its response to these deadly clashes to avoid this crisis getting out of control. They need to investigate and bring suspects to justice,” said Osai Ojigho Director Amnesty International Nigeria.

    “Hundreds of people lost their lives last year, and the government is still not doing enough to protect communities from these violent clashes. Worse, the killers are getting away with murder.

    “In some cases where the Nigerian security agencies did respond to communal violence, they used excessive or unlawful force resulting in even more deaths and destruction.

    “On 4 December 2017, Nigeria’s air force sent fighter jets to fire rockets at villages as a “warning” to deter spiralling communal violence, as hundreds of herdsmen attacked at least five villages in Adamawa state to avenge the massacre of up to 51 members of their community, mostly children, the previous month in Kikan.”

    The NAF, however, dismissed AI claims as baseless and unfounded, maintaining that  “at no time has the NAF been involved in settling any “herdsmen-farmers” clash in Numan.

    The Director Public Relations and Information of the NAF, Air Vice Marshal Olatokunbo Adesanya, in a statement issued in Abuja, said the intervention of the NAF in the Numan crisis of December 4, 2017 resulted in the successful dispersal of a group of hoodlums who were setting some villages around Numan on fire after unleashing terror on the residents.

    AVM Adesanya said: “To set the records straight, in the early hours of 4 December 2017, a NAF Intelligence Surveillance and Reconnaissance (ISR) platform departed Maiduguri to conduct ISR over Numan general area.

    “This was in response to a request by the General Officer Commanding (GOC) 3 Armoured Division of the Nigerian Army (NA), following reports of clashes around that location. Hundreds of people, mostly dressed in black attires, and who appeared armed, were sighted ransacking and setting a village on fire. In addition, the hoodlums set large portions of farmlands ablaze.

    “Furthermore, some of the men were seen guiding livestock out of the village. Consequently, a NAF aircraft was called in to support the NA and other relevant security agencies through ‘show of force’ low-level flights.

    “This was aimed at dispersing the huge crowd and thereby stopping the ongoing carnage. After several low passes, the crowd was undeterred and refused to disperse. Rather, the assailants started firing shots at the aircraft and continued in their dastardly act of burning houses within the settlement.

    “Overall, the NAF wishes to state as follows: At no time has the NAF been involved in settling any “herdsmen-farmers” clash in the Numan general area.

    “The NAF, either with its aircraft or by any other means, did not set any villages near Numan on fire on 4 December 2017 or at any other time.

    “NAF’s aircraft was not used to kill anyone in the villages around Numan during the crisis of 4 December 2017.

    “Amnesty International should produce credible evidence to substantiate its baseless allegations that NAF air attacks led to the destruction in the villages as well as loss of lives, failing which it should go to the press and retract its allegations.”

  • Benue, Taraba killings: FG opts for military action to flush out killers

    Benue, Taraba killings: FG opts for military action to flush out killers

    The Federal Government at the weekend opted to take decisive military force to deal with the bandits believed to be behind the killings in parts of the country especially regarding the crisis associated with herdsmen.

    The was disclosed on Sunday by a reliable Presidency source.

    The source, who spoke on condition of anonymity said “The role of bandits and suspected mercenaries in what has become known as herdsmen/ farmer clashes and violence may have provoked the need for a fresh approach to dealing with the crisis, informed sources close to the Working Group formed recently by the National Economic Council have hinted.”

    “The settled view in official circles is that the reported killings and violence recorded are the work of bandits and mercenaries since in many cases the herdsmen are often well-known in the communities where their cattle normally graze.”

    According to him, the new position is one of the outcomes of the Working Group formed less than two weeks ago by the National Economic Council with 9 Governors, and chaired by the Vice President, Yemi Osinbajo.

     The group was set up in a bid to end the impunity that has marked the activities of the bandits resulting in several deaths and maiming especially in Benue State.

    According to the Kano State Governor Dr. Ganguje who read out highlights and decisions of the NEC to reporters (alongside his Ebonyi counterpart ) after the Council meeting that Thursday the Working Group “will work in accordance with the President’s commitment to ensuring that all perpetrators of violence are brought to book.”

    The highlights also noted that the Working Group which consists of Governors from Zamfara, Kaduna, Adamawa, Benue, Taraba, Edo, Plateau, Ebonyi & Oyo States actually commenced its work with a meeting presided over by the VP right immediately after NEC at the Presidential Villa.

    The source disclosed that at the end of the Working Group meeting last week, it was clear a major turning point had been reached in the management of the crisis and sufficient consensus recorded on the need to stop the impunity by engaging the military in a more decisive manner.

    Some political analyst had  indicated that the crisis also required a political solution considering the religious and ethnic tones that could easily become further exacerbated and possibly worsen the situation if proper and timely care is not taken.

    “This is the reason analysts argue, even with some critical opinions on the composition of the Working Group, that the idea of gathering together governors across the country including the states where the crisis have been intense to collaborate actively among themselves and with the FG to address the situation is useful.

    “Indeed one of the firm outcomes of the Working Group’s meeting was the expressed readiness of the FG to locate and identify the bandits who perpetrate the killings and the violence, and using all necessary means including military involvement to flush them out of their hideouts in forests across the country as a definite move to secure the life and property of Nigerian citizens.

    “The Working Group has also resolved to work with the FG to strengthen law enforcement and all security & intelligence agencies in the country so they can coordinate better in dealing with, checkmating, and preventing the crisis from further escalation.”

    On how to permanently address the basis of the herdsmen and farmer clashes, the Working Group sources said that they have taken the view that every State should by a rigorous consultative process with all stakeholders design its own solutions.

    “The Federal government will not impose any solution on any State. The Vice President assured all that the Federal government would certainly not imposed its ideas n the States and noted that fears being expressed on cattle colonies are misplaced” he said

    He also confirmed that the military are already engaged and would soon begin to implement decisive military steps to tackle the situation.

    “Also the Nigerian Police and other security & military agencies have been asked to recruit more rank and file to tighten security in the troubled spots and in the country generally.” he said

  • QBF to honour widows, mothers of the military  on Val’s Day

    QBF to honour widows, mothers of the military on Val’s Day

    Nollywood actress, Queen Blessing Ebigieson will on February 14 honour widows of  fallen soldiers in Lagos through her widows empowerment initiative, Queen Blessing Foundation.

    Holding on February 14, 2018 at the hall of Command Day Secondary School, Ikeja Army Cantonment, about 1, 000 widows are expected to benefit from the initiative.

    The Nation gathered that monetary support will also be given to some lucky few to start up small businesses.

    The fifth edition of the Valentine Special has the theme, ‘Celebrating the Widows & Aged Mothers of Our Fallen Military Heroes’ will also serve as the foundation’s 10th anniversary.

    “We are celebrating the widows and mothers of our fallen heroes in the Air Force, Army and Navy this year and it promises to be a special one,” she said.

    “I am passionate about widows and aged women as their prayers go high up into heaven.”

    Last year, Okpella community, the country home of the quintessential actress hosted the last widow empowerment and it was a huge success.

  • Military deserves our prayers, support, says Dickson

    Military deserves our prayers, support, says Dickson

    Bayelsa State Governor Seriake Dickson yesterday called on Nigerians to pray for the military and the security forces to enforce the law dispassionately.

    Dickson said that security forces did not have to be politically correct to carry out their sensitive responsibility of law enforcement in the society.

    A statement by the Governor’s Special Adviser on Media Relations, Mr. Fidelis Soriwei, quoted him as saying that the critical issue of law enforcement should not be subjected to political sentiments.

    Dickson spoke at an Armed Forces Remembrance interdenominational service in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State and also urged Nigerians to also pray for protection of the security forces in the performance of their duties.

    He said: “I advise all to continue to pray for God to protect and guide our men and women in uniform, and also for God to give them the courage to do what is right and not to be politically correct because this is a case, mainly, of law and order.

    “There is nothing partisan, there is nothing political about it. Crime is crime, a criminal is a criminal and a killer is a killer.

    “Our position in the state is very well known: that in this government under me, there is no tolerance for lawlessness, brigandage or violence or criminality.

    “And so we pray for courage, for our men and women to do what is right”.

    The governor also said that it was necessary to pray to for some misguided elements and their political leaders who sponsor them and provide them with the arms to wreak havoc on innocent citizens and communities, to have a change of mind.

    The governor noted that some criminal elements were involved in attempts to distort the foundation for peace, stability and development which his administration had labored over the years to establish in Bayelsa.

    The governor, who also called for prayers for the families of the late heroes and and their counterparts in active service demanded improved attention for the welfare of the ex-service personnel in the country

    Dickson restated his zero tolerance policy of his Administration “for lawlessness, brigandage or violence or criminality.”

  • Residents flee Ekeremor over alleged beheading of security official

    Residents flee Ekeremor over alleged beheading of security official

    Residents of Ndoro community in Ekeremor Local Government Area of Bayelsa have fled the area following the alleged beheading of a security operative by militants.

    A resident of the community, Mr Henshaw Ebi, told news men on Friday that the security official was negotiating with a militants’ leader in the area to surrender their arms when the incident occurred.

    “The community was thrown into apprehension and people began to flee in droves since Monday when the lifeless body of the ‘security emissary’ was seen in the community without his head.

    “The victim cannot be identified because he is in plain cloth.

    “The fear is that the military might come after those responsible any moment from now and invade the community.

    “The community has been deserted as we speak due to fear of imminent manhunt for the militants behind the dastardly act,’’Ebi said.

    However, Bayelsa Government in a reaction to the development said on Friday that there was no cause for alarm.

    The government called on fleeing members of the community to return home as the situation had been brought under control.

    Read Also: Army urges Ondo militants to surrender remaining weapons

    The Commissioner for information, Mr Daniel Iworiso-Markson, said the assurance came in the wake of a meeting between Gov. Seriake Dickson, security chiefs, officials of the military high command, leaders and stakeholders of the community.

    The Commissioner said in a statement that the member representing Sagbama/Ekeremor federal constituency in the House of Representatives, Fred Agbedi also attended the meeting.

    Iworiso-Markson said it was resolved that the military would move into the community and restore normalcy, while the government would begin a peace process.

    He, therefore, called on the people who had fled to return as their safety was now guaranteed.

    He said with the presence of the military in the area they could go about their normal businesses.

    The commissioner said the situation was now under control following government’s quick intervention, and expressed regret over its occurrence.

    He said Gov. Seriake Dickson had met “with very senior security chiefs and the military high command, as well as leaders and key stakeholders to decide on the steps to take and it was agreed that the military will move in to provide the needed peace”.

    “So, we call on all those who have fled the community to return. There is no cause to be scared as government has intervened to ensure that the situation is brought under control,’’ he said.

    NAN

  • GROUPS THAT DOMINATED THE YEAR

    GROUPS THAT DOMINATED THE YEAR

    Indigenous People of Biafra

    It is not a rosy year for the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), a militant organization conceived and established for the realization of the birth of the Republic of Biafra, a project which dates back to the mid1960s.

    When the group commenced its agitation, it was considered by the government as an inconsequential body, and it was treated with derision. Its founder and leader, Nnamdi Kanu, was regarded as an unserious agitator and political nonentity, deserving no attention.

    When it launched into anti-government activities, it enjoyed widespread acceptance from the youths who perceived it as a liberation force capable of bringing about a country called Biafra for the people of the South East. And no notable Igbo leader came out openly to cast aspersions on the group.

    Later, the group became violent-prone during which many excesses were committed, and so its leader was arrested and detained.

    After a lot of pleading by Igbo leaders and other prominent Nigerians on his behalf, he was taken to court and charged with treason. He was ultimately granted bail with a warning to desist from anti-government activities.

    On regaining his freedom, instead of treading the path of honour by stopping the agitation, he embarked on ways to invigorate it, violating all his bail conditions.

    This development engendered the revocation of the bail and his being declared wanted.

    He is now a fugitive from justice, and his group is gradually going into oblivion.

     

    Northern youths

    Northern youths, operating under the umbrella of the Coalition of Northern Groups (CNG), badly shook the nation with its announcement on June 6 of a quit notice to the Igbo  living in the northern part of the country. They were asked to leave for the South East on October 1.

    This line of action was greeted with howls of condemnation throughout the country. Almost all groups and Nigerians of note stridently criticized the notice which was seen as a means of destroying the fragile unity of the nation and a level of complexity to the politics of tribalism plaguing the country.

    According to the northern youths, the quit notice was in retaliation for the agitation of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) for the Republic of Biafra and the insults thrown at northerners by the group.

    The youths also accused the Igbo of ingratitude, for, according to them, they were the major beneficiaries of northerners’ generosity in the area of business generating stupendous wealth for them.

    They mentioned specific business sectors dominated by the Igbo in the North through which they made a lot of money which was later used to transform their own region.

    As October I was approaching, there was mounting tension. But a palpable sense of relief was felt all over the nation with the revocation of the notice by the spokesman of the coalition, Abdulazeez Sulaiman, in a statement issued in Abuja on August 24.

     

    Boko Haram

    Boko Haram militants, early in the year, unleashed terror on the country with renewed vigour and determination in order to bring the military to its knees.

    But their field day abruptly came to an end when they met their Waterloo from the well-equipped and gallant armed forces which fought in accordance with the rules of engagement.

    It was with glee that the Nigerian government, towards the end of the year, announced the degradation of the brutal terrorist group that held the nation to ransom for many years.

    An indication of the heavy defeat of the militants is a return to normalcy in Maiduguri, Kondugua, Kaoure and Bama which used to be their strongholds.

    A strategy to flush out the remaining scattered members of the group out of Nigeria and its neighbouring countries is in the offing, and $1billion has been earmarked to finance the project.

    Niger Delta Avengers:   The Niger Delta Avengers, a group which prides itself on avenging what it regards as the government’s injustice to its people and region, on many occasions wreaked havoc on oil facilities.

    The destruction caused by the group imperceptibly dragged the country into economic crisis, and the devastating effects of this on the national economy manifested in other sectors which affected the standard of living and provision capital projects.

    Nigerians appealed to the government to bring the agitators to the negotiating table. The advice was at first spurned. But it was later heeded.

    The Federal Government swung into action, and the group was pacified through some offers and concessions which are greatly beneficial to the people of the region.

    The group now maintains the peace, but it issues threats to preclude the government from taking decisions it considers unfavourable to the interest of the Niger Delta.

     

    Pan-Niger Delta Forum

    The Pan-Niger Delta Forum (PANDEF), under the leadership of Chief Edwin Clark, was out with the intention of bringing about enduring peace in the Niger Delta region of the country.

    To make this a reality, a 16-point agenda was presented to the Federal Government.

    There was opposition to the forum. Some militant groups in the region expressed lack of confidence in it and dragged its name through the mire. They advised the government to keep away from negotiating with it.

    There were also divergent opinions from other Nigerians on the intervention of the group. It was hailed mostly by people outside the South-South. They believed it was a means of making the region peaceful. Those who opposed it were of the opinion that it was out to halt the progressive march of the militants to make life more easy for their people.

    But the generality of people are of the belief that the implementation of the group’s propositions will lead to a peaceful, progressive and secure region.

     

    Ohanaeze

    Dr. John Nwodo was very active as the leader of Ohanaeze, and, as usual, the group was always prepared for the protection and promotion of the interest of the Igbo in the South East and South-South of Nigeria.

    Ohanaeze supported the restructuring of the country because of its obvious advantages to its people. They also saw it as an alternative to secession.

    When Nnamdi Kanu, the leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), was in detention, members of the group were strident in urging the government for his unconditional release.

    The organization vehemently condemned the militarization of the South East, following threats from the IPOB. They failed to reason with the Federal Government on the operation, claiming it was meant to punish the people of the region.

    The operation, tagged “Python Dance”, was consequently launched but the period was characterized by virulent criticisms from the group.

    It was against the use of force in dealing with the IPOB and counselled caution and dialogue.

     

     Arewa Consultative Forum

    The interest of the people of the northern part of the country was the major concern of the Arewa Consultative Forum (ACF), and this was well taken care of during the year.

    The forum, led by former Inspector General of Police,  Alhaji Ibrahim Coomassie, was always oppositional on issues which were inimical to the interest of the northerners, while praising and supporting ones which were favourable to them.

    The organization was a vociferous critic of restructuring as propounded by other regions of the country. It was always in support of strong institutions and good governance.

    The forum flung itself into programmes to address challenges fuelling poverty among its people and militating against the development of the North.

     

    Afenifere

    Afenifere always rose to the challenges confronting Yoruba as a cultural group.

    It was at the forefront of the battle for the restructuring of the country and the economic integration of the South West to fight the economic and social problems bedevilling the region.

    Some prominent members of the group strongly criticized President Muhammadu Buhari on his advice to the World Bank to give priority to the North East in siting developmental projects. The president’s comment was considered as an act of partiality.

    The ravages of the North East by Boko Haram’s atrocities adduced by the presidency and his party for the president’s position was countered by the opponents who insisted it was out of tribalism.

    Since the elder statesman, Chief Reuben Fasoranti, took the helm of the organization, this year was special in its life. With the cooperation and commitment of other grandees of the body, he worked assiduously for its revitalization and the unity of the Yoruba race.

     

     Military

    The military displayed professionalism, discipline, gallantry and resilience in its battles against Boko Haram militants, and these attributes contributed largely in engendering their humiliating defeat and quick dispersal.

    They were hotly pursued to Camp Zero, their spiritual headquarters, in Sambisa Forest which was later reduced to rubble by the superior power of our armed forces.

    The hotbed of Boko Haram’s terrorist acts, comprising Maiduguri, Kondugua, Kaoure and Bama, is now a peaceful and secure area with thriving business activities.

     

    Badoo

    Badoo, a group of ritual killers, invaded the Ikorodu area of Lagos State and killed with gusto.

    Like vampires, they revelled in taking their victims’ blood with white handkerchiefs after the dastardly killing.

    This was on for months, and many people, including babies and women, were victims of the brutal antisocial group.

    When the killing was on the increase, it became a matter of concern to all Nigerians as human rights organizations, media, women bodies, international groups and well-meaning Nigerians were calling for actions to put a halt to the dreadful activities of these faceless villains.

    Ikorodu and its environs slid into ferment. Blood and tears were flowing. There were anguish and anger all over the place. The cries of the victims were worryingly loud.

    All these triggered off actions and the murderous attacks were later stopped through the concerted and determined efforts of the government, security operatives, traditional rulers and local people.