Tag: Nigerian Air Force

  • Air Force tasks personnel on discipline, synergy

    The Nigerian Air Force (NAF) has charged its personnel to remain discipline and uphold military traditions wherever they find themselves.

    The Commandant, Nigerian Armed Forces Resettlement Centre  (NAFRC) Oshodi, Lago, Air Vice Marshal (AVM) Augustine Jekennu, stated this at the NAF regimental dinner held at the headquarters, Logistics Command, Lagos.

    Jekennu reminded the personnel that discipline was the bedrock of the military, urging them to also uphold the spirit of comradeship with other security agencies.

    He said: “The regimental dinner is an age old tradition of the military worldwide. Its essence is to foster camaraderie and corporation among the troops. It’s an opportunity for the hosting unit to relate with other agencies for better interservice corporation.

    “I use this opportunity to urge personnel to remain disciplined and to imbibe military traditions. Let the older officers teach the younger ones the rules guiding regimental dinner. I noticed some flaws in the course of the dinner such as people talking across table. Some of those lapses ought to be corrected and we can only achieve it by teaching the younger ones.”

    At the dinner were the Air Officer Commanding (AOC) Logistics Command, AVM Ibrahim Yahaya, President Mess Committee (PMC), Air Commodore EJ Udenyi, Lagos Police Commissioner Fatai Owoseni and Commander, Operation AWATSE, Brig.-Gen. Julius Ogbobe, among others.

    Owoseni described the dinner as wonderful, adding that it would help security agencies work better together.

    He said: “We have been working closely together and would continue to do so. We also need to socialise together. The more we have dinners like this, the more we instill discipline and perfect our etiquette.”

     

     

  • Nigerian Air Force  urges personnel on safety

    Nigerian Air Force urges personnel on safety

    THE Nigerian Air Force (NAF) has urged its personnel to be safety conscious and avoid habits that could impede operations.

    Air Officer Commanding (AOC) Logistics Command Air Vice Marshal Sani Ahmed stated this at the weekend during the Command Flight Line Safety Campaign.

    The campaign saw air personnel picking foreign object debris across the flight line at 401 Aircraft Maintenance Depot, Lagos, after which they were taken through some first aid drills by an official of the Nigerian Red Cross, Bright Charles.

    Personnel were also lectured on safety in hanger and flight line environment, as well as engineering practices and procedures in the Air Force.

    According to Ahmed, the two-day safety campaign was aimed at reawakening safety habits on the flight line.

    He said: “NAF operates sensitive equipment and we don’t want anything to happen to them. Therefore, there’s need to identify differences between safe habit and unsafe act.

    “Flying is a risky business and so, we want to ensure we maintain high level safety in the flight line. By now, personnel should be able to differentiate between hazard, risk and danger.

    “We introduced them to flight line work not to keep the flight line clean but so that they would know that certain objects pose serious dangers to our operations. Somebody might see a small metal and ignore it but that metal can cause serious risk if it pierces the tyre. It would also cost money to repair or replace that tyre.

    “This campaign is usually done yearly because we have sophisticated equipment at hanger and so, personnel need to be reminded on what to do to avoid disaster. Safety is a continuous business and must be done regularly so that it becomes part and parcel of personnel.

    “We are looking to make it quarterly because it is a continuous thing. It is the thinking of the headquarters that personnel should be able to differentiate between safe habit and unsafe act.”

    At the exercise were the command’s Evaluation Officer Air Commodore Edward Adedokun, Commander 401 Aircraft Maintenance Depot Air Commodore Emmanuel Wonah, Commander and 65 Forward Operation Base, Badagry Air Commodore CU Umolu, among others.

  • Boko Haram: NAF launches Operation forest storm

    Boko Haram: NAF launches Operation forest storm

    The Nigerian Air Force on Tuesday launched a new operation in the step- up of the fight against Boko Haram insurgents in Northeast Nigeria. The new operation codenamed “Operation Forest Storm”  is to eliminate the inflow of Boko Haram insurgents from the northern part of Borno to the South.
    Briefing newsmen at the NAF base Yola in Adamwa state, the Chief of Training and Operations, Headquarters Nigerian Air Force, Air Vice Marshal Ahmed Abdullahi Iya, said the special operation is expected to last for about seven days.
    He said as part of the Operation of the NAF in Lafiya Dole, air surveillance conducted over the entire theater of Operations in the Northeast revealed some insurgents in the southern part of the Area of Operation and Forest Storm is specifically designed to take care of them.
    Iya: “As part of our campaign against insurgency in the North Easter part of the country, we have been focusing more on the north, nevertheless we conducted surveillance all over the Theater of Operations and we started noticing some insurgents in the south, that is why we have launched a special operation to take care of that.
    “ The name of the operation is Operation Forest Storm and it is just for a few days, we are focusing mainly on interdiction, we have identified a specific target to take out through interdiction. From our calculations, it is not going to take more than three days but we are planning for seven days to take care of what we have seen.”
    He said since the campaign began, security has greatly improved in the northeast and the military operations have been able to degrade the ranks of the insurgents. “We know things have improved from the nature of attacks, you no longer see them attacking in large convoys, most of them use motorcycles now.”
    He assured that civilians have nothing to fear about the operation as the Air Force will ensure there is no collateral damage.
    “We have conducted surveillance, selected our targets and analyzed very well before we decide on the attack, the mode and the type of weapon to use. All these are carefully planned and we do not foresee any collateral damage so there is no cause for alarm, Iya said.
  • We will improve heart and mind – NAF chief

    We will improve heart and mind – NAF chief

     The Nigerian Air Force has continued to invest heavily in the welfare of its officers and men especially through the provision of standardize educational facilities for dependents of its personnel. Assistant Editor, Seun Akioye who was at the commissioning of two schools reports

     

    Inside the headquarters of the Nigerian Air Force (NAF) Abuja, the vision statement of the Chief of the Air Staff (CAS), Air Marshal Sadique Abubakar was boldly written. The statement reads:  “To re-position the NAF into a highly professional and disciplined force through capacity building initiatives for effective, efficient and timely employment of air power in response to Nigeria’s national security imperatives.”

    On the surface, it may look like one of those well-crafted mission statements which usually end up as empty statements, but for the man who is referred to simply as “chief”, the vision is worth every weight.

    NAFOWA Little Angels Primary School Kaduna.jpg
    NAFOWA Little Angels Primary School Kaduna

    One of the ways which the CAS is hoping to re-write history and fulfill his vision is through education not only of Air Force personnel-which is done through training- but also providing for the needs of the dependents of his men through provision of world class educational  facilities.

    One of such is the Air Force Girls’ Comprehensive School located at the NAF Base Abuja.  The NAF was not the original initiator of the school, but the Nigerian Air Force Officers Wives Association (NAFOWA), led by Hajia Hafsat Abubakar, wife of the CAS. But the NAF took over the construction of the school after NAFOWA ran out of resources to complete it in 2013.

    In December 2015, the CAS directed that work should resume and in eight months, a world class infrastructure stood in the ruins of the abandoned structure.   What was built was described by the Minister for Education, Mallam Adamu Adamu, who was represented by the Permanent Secretary, Dr. Folasade Yemi- Esan as a “21st century school.”

    The sparkling new school boasts of a mini stadium, dining hall, hostel, tennis court, fully equipped classrooms, a library and a clinic. A standby generator is on hand to provide electricity while the science, Art and Agriculture laboratories and four other classrooms are equipped with interactive white boards which enables the students to experience the three ways of learning: hear, see, and feel.

    Educating the girl child

    Air Force comprehensive girls school Abuja
    Air Force comprehensive girls school Abuja

    The CAS did not bite his lips when he enumerated the importance of educating the girl child and why the NAF view it as one of its cardinal focus.” Our experience in fighting insurgency in the Northeast indicates the exploitation of the girl child by insurgents due to low literacy level. At present, birth rate statistics show that 65 percent of births are girls. It is documented by most state Ministries of Education that the enrolment of girls in secondary schools is below 45 percent.

    “This statistic is further supported by the results of the West African Examination Council. For instance in 2011,out of a total of 688,516 girls that sat for the examination, only 226,804 got 5 credits. Similarly in 2012, about 747,553 girls sat for the examination and only 310,822 were successful.”

    The CAS said this NAF resolved to establish the school as “our modest contribution to Mr. President’s efforts at enhancing girl child education in Nigeria.” With the new school, the NAF now has two secondary schools dedicated to girl child education with one in Jos and Abuja respectively. He added that the school will educate the hearts and minds of the girls that would pass through its gates.

    For the Minister of Education, the construction of the school was “humbling” also stressing that the ratio of girl child education to boys is 1:3 in some states. This is also reinforced by the extremism of Boko Haram and the risks associated with girl child education kept the female educational attainment perpetually low.

    After commissioning the school and a tour of the facilities was conducted, Dr. Yemi Esan said: “ I came here with some uncertainties but I am impressed, this school is directed towards the underprivileged to curt out of school syndrome, we encourage other arms of government to follow suit, this is a 21st century school.”

    Yemi- Esan would not be the only one to be impressed, the next day at the Air Force Base Kaduna where NAFOWA had rehabilitated a nursery school and added the NAFOWA Little Angels Primary School, the CAS was also left impressed.

    “I am overwhelmed,” he said when he was called to make a remark after the school had been commissioned by Hajia Aisha Buhari, the wife of President Muhammadu Buhari, represented by the wife of Kaduna State Governor, Hajia Hadiza El-rufai.

    “Four years ago, I brought my daughter to the crèche here, but I am sure she cannot recognize her school again because of the transformation,” he said. Like the girls school, the NAFOWA Primary school was built to world standard with ample playing room for the children, a fully equipped library and computer centre, spacious and conducive atmosphere for learning, white black boards, fully equipped home economics room and a crèche with modern facilities.

    While the CAS may have focused on education for the dependents of personnel, the real driver of these projects is adding value to the society.” Adding value to the society is our core mandate, I strongly belief that adding value to the society is the best legacy we can bequeath to our children,” he said. But there is also a greater vision, that of thinking ahead. “ We have recruited 2,400 personnel ad with the increase, you must start thinking of infrastructure. Our actions are driven by the desire to add value to society and that is the right direction to go,” he said.

    There are many worries that come with such projects, will the infrastructure not a pointer to an exorbitant school fees.  Will the school be opened to children of civilians and how would the NAF maintain such a high standard facility, how much was expended into the project?

    The CAS has answers for all. The school will follow the usual NAF fees schedule without adding anything on, the school will be opened to civilians, the NAF has maintenance structure put in place and the schools are of high standard so will stand the test of time and the schools are built using direct labour from the NAF, thereby cutting costs and enhancing the skills of Air Force engineers.

    Relaxation centre in Air Force Girls school
    Relaxation centre in Air Force Girls school

     

  • Nigerian Air Force opens new schools for girls

    Nigerian Air Force opens new schools for girls

     The Nigerian Air Force has continued to invest in the welfare of its officers and men, especially through the provision of standardised educational facilities for dependents of its personnel. Assistant Editor, Seun Akioye who was at the inauguration of two schools reports

    Inside the headquarters of the Nigerian Air Force (NAF) Abuja, the vision statement of the Chief of the Air Staff (CAS), Air Marshal Sadique Abubakar, was boldly written. The statement reads:  ”To re-position the NAF into a highly professional and disciplined force through capacity building initiatives for effective, efficient and timely employment of air power in response to Nigeria’s national security imperatives.”

    On the surface, it may look like one of those well-crafted mission statements which usually end up as empty statements, but for the man who is referred to simply as “chief,” the vision is worth every weight.

    One of the ways the CAS is hoping to re-write history and fulfill his vision is through education, not only of Air Force personnel-which is done through training- but also providing for the needs of the dependents of his men through the provision of world class educational facilities.

    One of such is the Air Force Girls’ Comprehensive School located at the NAF, Base Abuja.  The NAF was not the original initiator of the school, but the Nigerian Air Force Officers Wives Association (NAFOWA), led by Hajia Hafsat Abubakar, wife of the CAS. The NAF however, took over the construction of the school after NAFOWA ran out of resources to complete it in 2013.

    In December 2015, the CAS directed that work should resume and in eight months, a world-class infrastructure stood in the ruins of the abandoned structure. What was built was described by the Minister for Education, Mallam Adamu Adamu, who was represented by the Permanent Secretary, Dr. Folasade Yemi-Esan as a “21st century school.”

    The sparkling new school boasts of a mini stadium, dining hall, hostel, tennis court, fully equipped classrooms, a library and a clinic. A standby generator is on hand to provide electricity while the science, Art and Agriculture laboratories and four other classrooms are equipped with interactive white boards, which enable the students to experience the three ways of learning: hearing, seeing and feeling.

    Educating the girl-child

    The CAS did not bite his lips when he enumerated the importance of educating the girl-child and why the NAF views it as one of its cardinal focus.” Our experience in fighting insurgency in the North-east indicates the exploitation of the girl-child by insurgents due to low literacy level. At present, birth rate statistics show that 65 percent of births are girls. But it is documented by most state ministries of education that the enrolment of girls in secondary schools is below 45 percent.

    “This statistic is further supported by the results of the West African Examination Council. For instance in 2011, out of a total of 688,516 girls that sat for the examination, only 226,804 got 5 credits. Similarly in 2012, about 747,553 girls sat for the examination and only 310,822 were successful.”

    The CAS said the NAF resolved to establish the school as “our modest contribution to Mr. President’s efforts at enhancing girl-child education in Nigeria.” With the new school, the NAF now has two secondary schools dedicated to girl-child education with one in Jos and Abuja respectively. He added that the school will educate the hearts and minds of the girls that would pass through its gates.

    For the Minister of Education, the construction of the school was “humbling.” He stressed that the ratio of girl-child education to boys is 1:3 in some states. This is also reinforced by the extremism of Boko Haram and the risks associated with girl-child education, which has kept the female educational attainment perpetually low.

    After the inauguration and tour of the school facilities, Dr. Yemi-Esan said: “I came here with some uncertainties but I am impressed. This school is directed towards the underprivileged to cut out of school syndrome. We encourage other arms of government to follow suit, this is a 21st century school.”

    Yemi-Esan would not be the only one to be impressed; the next day at the Air Force Base Kaduna where NAFOWA had rehabilitated a nursery school and added the NAFOWA Little Angels Primary School, the CAS was also left impressed.

    “I am overwhelmed,” he said when he was called to make a remark after the school had been commissioned by Hajia Aisha Buhari, the wife of President Muhammadu Buhari, represented by the wife of Kaduna State Governor, Hajia Hadiza El-rufai.

    “Four years ago, I brought my daughter to the crèche here, but I am sure she cannot recognise her school again because of the transformation,” he said. Like the girls school, the NAFOWA Primary School was built to world standard with ample play room for the children, a fully equipped library and computer centre, spacious and conducive atmosphere for learning, white black boards, fully equipped home economics room and a crèche with modern facilities.

    While the CAS may have focused on education for the dependents of personnel, the real driver of these projects is adding value to the society. “Adding value to the society is our core mandate, I strongly belief that adding value to the society is the best legacy we can bequeath to our children,” he said.

    But there is also a greater vision, which is of thinking ahead. “We have recruited 2,400 personnel and with the increase, you must start thinking of infrastructure. Our actions are driven by the desire to add value to society and that is the right direction to go,” he said.

    There are many worries that come with such high-profile projects, one of which is that it may come with exorbitant fees or that it may not be open to children of civilians.  There is also the question of maintenance.

    The CAS has answers to all. The school will follow the usual NAF fees schedule without adding any kobo; the school will be open to civilians and the NAF has put in place a maintenance structure that’ll ensure that facilities remain top-notch.

  • Video: Air Force blast Boko Haram camp

    Video: Air Force blast Boko Haram camp

    The Nigerian Air Force (NAF) Director of Public Information, Group Captain Ayodele Famuyiwa, intelligence report has indicated that Several Boko Haram Commanders who were wounded in a similar attack on the night of August 20, 2016, over 300, were believed to have been receiving treatment at the camp when the attack occurred.

    Famuyiwa said the latest strike followed the trail of the intelligence, with the aim of neutralizing the suspected leaders of the sect who are high value targets.

    See video below:

  • NAF bombs Boko Haram hideout

    NAF bombs Boko Haram hideout

    The Nigerian Air Force (NAF) has successfully destroyed a Boko Haram camp at Tumbun Rego in Northern Borno in an unexpected attack on the terrorists’ position.

    According to NAF Director of Public Information, Group Captain Ayodele Famuyiwa, intelligence report has indicated that Several Boko Haram Commanders who were wounded in a similar attack on the night of August 20, 2016, over 300, were believed to have been receiving treatment at the camp when the attack occurred.

    Famuyiwa said the latest strike followed the trail of the intelligence, with the aim of neutralizing the suspected leaders of the sect who are high value targets.

    He said the NAF is yet to ascertain the casualty figure, but post-strike Battle Damage Assessment (BDA) mission shows that the degree of damage achieved was devastating as the buildings were engulfed by large fire as can be seen from the declassified video of the air operation.

  • Militancy: Air Force shifts attention to South South

    Militancy: Air Force shifts attention to South South

    The Nigerian Air Force is shifting attention to the Southsouth to check militancy, Chief of the Air Staff, Air Marshal Sadique Abubakar, said yesterday in Abuja.

    Speaking during the quarterly route march of the NAF, he said the air force was in the process of deploying  its fighter aircraft and other air power arsenals, including the F7i Supersonic assault aircraft, the Alpha jets and Mi-35 gunships, to the Niger Delta region  put a stop to the recent resurgence of destruction of oil and gas infrastructure by militants.

    “The challenges in the North-East have been substantially addressed; so we are not worried much about the North-East,” he said

    “Our main focus now would be to protect the territorial integrity of Nigeria in the South-South and to ensure that our oil and gas infrastructure is not destroyed by any group or individuals.

    “Very soon, we will launch an exercise in the South-South also, and the aim of the exercise is to protect our people and the infrastructure of Nigeria.”

    He said the route match was aimed at preparing officers and men for the demands of their profession.

    “We are all aware of the challenges the Nigerian state is facing; so we must therefore be in the best of forms in terms of our health and physical well-being, to be able to address this challenges,” he said.

    “This is why the quarterly route match exercise is an exercise we take seriously. We want to assure Nigerians that, by this exercise, even at the highest level, we are capable, and willing to face the challenges in the Nigerian state;  if we can do this at this level, then you can imagine what our officers and air men are doing in the battle front.

  • Security forces to demolish illegal structures at Arepo, Ikorodu creeks

    Security forces to demolish illegal structures at Arepo, Ikorodu creeks

    • As military moves to establish permanent base at Maiduguri

    Security forces Thursday identified uncompleted structures and houses built on the right of way, isolated bushes at Lagos and Ogun riverine communities as threats that must be dismantled.

    This is just as the acting Inspector General of Police  (IGP) Ibrahim Idris told the ground forces to demolish houses belonging to militants or their conspirators as was exhibited in the northeast during the fight against terrorist sect Boko Haram.

    The ground forces have been mopping up the creeks since Tuesday afternoon after the Nigerian Air Force concluded its aerial bombardment of the identified places.

    The Nation reports that over 40 camps have been destroyed at Ishawo creek alone, while the operatives have recovered items such as two locally made guns, two generators, eight dane guns, 32 live cartridges, two laptops, one magazine, AK47, a magazine of GPMG.

    Also recovered were handcuffs, 18 cutlasses, two Mobile Police badges, two Ecobank withdrawal booklets, INEC voter’s cards and FCMB deposit slips, among others.

    Idris who was at Ishawo to observe the situation of things for himself, commended the military for the successes recorded under Operation AWATSE.

    He urged fleeing residents to return and cooperate with security forces by providing information, just as he assured them of their safety and peace.

    “We are here to see the theatre of war, as well as support our officers. To boost their morale so that they can do more than what they have done. I have been in Lagos and I have heard so much and it is our responsibility to assist the men on the operation they are doing.

    “Especially in the area of deploying most of our marine police here, which we are going to do and to also encourage the residents of the local community.

    “We are here together; you can see police, the Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) as well as the military. So, it is an indication that the police is everywhere.

    “As I discussed without officers on the ground, anybody having connection with enemies of the society, we will demolish their housed.  That was the practice we adopted in fighting Boko Haram elements.”

    Similarly, the Operation’s chairman, Rear Admiral Fergusson Bobai who took a tour of Ishawo, Elepete, Arepo and Ibafo creeks hinted of plans by the military to establish permanent base at Majidun, Ikorodu, while outposts will be mounted in other troubled communities to deter the gunmen from returning.

    He stated that the inaccessibility of the affected areas as well as the absence of security agencies emboldened the militants to carry out their criminal activities with impunity.

    Bobai also noted the need for the government to approve the demolition of structures built on the Nigerian National Petroleum Company’s (NNPC) right of way, insisting that they posed hindrances to security operations.

    Confirming that the militants have been completely chased from the areas visited, Bobai that the military was working towards running them out of Fatola, their supposed headquarters.

    “We are looking forward to the government building permanent structures for us at Majidun as the headquarters for Operation AWATSE and then we will have our outposts where men are deployed.

    “We have started ground operations after the NAF has finished its air bombardment. However, the Air Force is still providing support to the ground forces. We have essentially identified four targets and have finished mopping up one of them. I came here to see how far they have gone. They will move into other places and do the mop up with the forces on ground.

    “We came here because it is one of the in routes from where militants ply their trade. We could not come by water from Majidun where we disembarked from our boats because our boats could not enter here. Ishawo is where we have access to launch our smaller boats for our men to penetrate the creeks.

    “Pipeline vandals and militants have been engaging in illegal economic activities here and also disturbing the residents and so, we needed to flush them out following directives from the Chief of Defence Staff. They are Nigerians but engaged in illegal activities.

    “We have made a lot of success since last Thursday. We still can’t say the number of persons killed because we are yet to get into the areas that were properly bombarded.

    At Elepete, Bobai said there was a lot of bombardment at the creek there because from air surveillance, the security forces observed that the place was a safe haven for militants’ operations.
    The Nation observed that scores of 50 litres jerry cans littered the water which has been polluted with petro.

    Also, hosts, pumping machines and wooden boats stocked with kegs were also sighted.
    The commanding officer of the military tactical base, Colonel Julius Ogbobe who gave statistics of the recoveries said investigations were being carried out to ascertain certain things.

    He said: “We want to find out the depositor and the owners of the phone numbers. The swamps are not easily accessible. The government has to assist by building roads as well as bringing cutting machines to clear the creeks.”

  • NAF to sustain Arepo bombardments

    The Nigerian Military on Monday said the aerial bombardments of Arepo and Ikorodu creeks by the Nigerian Air Force (NAF) fighter jets will continue.

    The Flag Officer Commanding (FOC), Western Naval Command, Rear Admiral Fergusson Bobai stated this in a chat with journalists.

    Speaking at the headquarters, NAF Logistics Command, Ikeja, shortly after a security meeting attended by participating agencies, Bobai said the decision to sustain the bombardment was taken to enable troops completely penetrate four key targets identified in the areas.

    At the briefing were the Air Officer Commanding (AOC), Logistics Command, Air Vice Marshal Sani Ahmed; the Commander, 9 Brigade of the Nigerian Army, Gen. Sani Mohammed; Lagos State Police Commissioner, Fatai Owoseni, the Director, Department of State Services (DSS) and the Commandant, Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC), Tajudeen Balogun.

    Bobai said: “After using some of their surveillance air craft to carry out racking of the areas since Thursday, the NAF pilots were at the Logistics Command today (Monday) to brief us. We identified four key targets which we believe when knocked off, will set confusion in the militants’ and vandals’ camp.

    “The NAF over the weekend used their Alpha Jets and helicopters to identify the targets and so, we had to call all the agencies involved to do an after battle assessment.

    “We have watched the video that the racking aircrafts have captured and we are convinced that there is need to sustain the operation. So, we are going to sustain and continue to mob up the ground as the NAF use their air power to neutralise some other areas.”