Tag: boko haram

  • Buhari identifies those behind Boko Haram’s terrorism attacks

    Buhari identifies those behind Boko Haram’s terrorism attacks

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Monday said some international groups were behind Boko Haram activities in the country.

    Buhari spoke during a Presidential Lunch organized for him by Kano State Government during a one-day official visit.

    ”When we came to power in 2015, Boko Haram was in total control in 13 of the 17 Local Government Areas of Borno State as only four were in control of the government then.

    Buhari told the gathering that he suspected there was an international group that wanted to destroy Nigeria, adding that, “If not, how can Boko (western education) be Haram?”

    “They have come to stop us from tapping our development from lake Chad.

    “But we have managed to show Nigerians and the rest of the world that we have so many natural resources there,” he said.

    ”We have to pray harder and thank God, we’ll fight for our land from the international groups that are trying to destroy Nigeria.

    ”We are very lucky that this government has done well and Governor Zulum of Borno State, who has done extremely well.

    ”I have a story to share with you that somebody told me. That a permanent secretary was at home when someone called him that Governor Zulum was in  his office.

    ”I am very happy that Nigerians have shown me support. They identified with me and I identified with them.

    “I want you to recall that between 1999 and 2019,  NNPC production was 2.1 billion barrels a day at the cost of 100 dollars per barrel.”

    According to him, Nigeria was earning 100 dollars per barrel and it is producing  2.1 million barrels per day but look at our infrastructure.

    He explained that those in charge in those years were going around not only Nigeria but the world, saying they were wonderful but they could not explain what they had done.

    “The cost of petroleum today has gone down to about 37 dollars per barrel which only1.5 million barrels is produced and yet we have put in place a lot of infrastructure.

    ” Looking at what we have been able to do. I assure you that we have a wonderful country.

    ” I have been a governor, I have been a minister and I have been a Head of State, fought in the civil war.

    “We have to thank God with what we have in the country today”, the president said.

    Earlier, Gov Abdullahi Ganduje appreciated President Buhari for identifying with the good people of Kano state.

  • Troops eliminate 103 Boko Haram members in Northeast

    Troops eliminate 103 Boko Haram members in Northeast

     

    …nab four commanders

    Troops of Operation Hadin Kai (OPHK) have eliminated 103 Boko Haram/Islamic State of West Africa State Province (ISWAP) in the past three weeks in the Northeast.

    The Director, Defence Media Operations, Maj.-Gen. Musa Danmadami stated this while reviewing progress of military operations on Thursday in Abuja.

     

    He said the troops also apprehended 22 terrorists including four commanders and 18 collaborators within the theatre during the period.

    He disclosed that the troops rescued 30 abducted civilians while 280 terrorists and their families comprising 29 males, 73 females and 148 children surrendered to the military across the theatre of operation.

    According to him, the land and air components of the OPHK have continued to dominate the general area as operational activities were being conducted in villages, towns and mountains.

    “Cumulatively, within the weeks in focus, troops recovered 20 AK47 rifles, two G3 rifles, five FN rifles, two QJC guns, one gun truck, 2,411 rounds of 7.62mm special, 143 belted rounds of 7.62mm NATO, one barreta pistol, 26 AK47 magazines, four bandoliers, four 36 hand grenades, among others.

    “Other items recovered are 33 motorcycles, 33 bicycles, medical suppliers, 50 pieces of males and females fabrics, bags of grains, jerrycans of groundnut oil, cartons of detergents, the sum of N291,060 and other sundry items.

    “All recovered items, rescued civilians and arrested terrorists have been handed over to the appropriate authority for further action, while the surrendered Boko Haram/ISWAP terrorists and members of their families are being profiled for further action,” he said.

  • FG slams Atiku over comment on Boko Haram

    FG slams Atiku over comment on Boko Haram

    The Federal Government on Tuesday berated former Vice-President Atiku Abubakar over a statement credited to him expressing surprise at the existence of Boko Haram insurgents.

    Atiku, the presidential candidate of the opposition People’s Democratic Party (PDP) was quoted as saying that he could not understand the Boko Haram phenomenon, and wondered why Boko Haram continued to operate.

    Responding to the statement, the Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed said Atiku should throw the question to his party, PDP “under whose watch the Boko Haram insurgency started in 2009 and festered.”

    The minister gave the response at the 11th edition of the President Muhammadu Buhari (PMB)’s Scorecard Series (2015-2023)’ organised to showcase the achievements of the Buhari administration.

    The edition featured the Minister of Power, Aliyu Abubakar. who gave the scorecard of the ministry in the past seven years.

    In an opening remark, Mohammed said for six years until 2015, when the Buhari administration assumed office and inherited Boko Haram, ”the PDP more or less nurtured the insurgents to the monster they later became.

    “Alhaji Atiku should ask his party why it allowed Boko Haram to operate freely, bombing cities, motor parks, schools and other soft targets unrestrained.

    “Alhaji Atiku, who was then residing in Abuja before porting to his new abode in Dubai, should ask his party, the PDP, while it allowed Boko Haram to bomb the police headquarters, the UN complex, a shopping mall and motor parks in Abuja with so much ease,” he said.

    The minister said with the efforts and sacrifices of the Nigerian military, normalcy had been achieved in the North East, the home region of Boko Haram.

    He said the Boko Haram terrorists had been cleared from most of their strongholds while the remnants were being restricted to the tumbus island around the Lake Chad that were difficult to access.

    “The former Vice-President may want to know that both kinetic and non-kinetic activities employed by the military have seen the terrorists surrendering in droves, thereby freeing large spaces for normal socio-economic life to resume.

    “The good news this year is that a bumper agricultural harvest is assured, as farmers were able to carry out extensive farming, which had not been possible since the beginning of insurgency/terrorism in the North East,” he said.

    The minister admonished Atiku to, while on campaigning and throwing political jabs, ”should take note of the popular idiom that people who live in glass houses should not throw stones.”

  • Late Boko Haram leader, Shekau had 83 concubines – Ex-commanders reveal

    Late Boko Haram leader, Shekau had 83 concubines – Ex-commanders reveal

    Former Boko Haram commanders who surrendered to Nigerian troops have revealed that late terrorist leader, Abubakar Shekau, left behind 83 concubines.

    Recall that Shekau was killed during a supremacy battle with a faction of the terrorist group in Sambisa forest in May 2021.

    Special Adviser to Borno State governor on Security, Brig Gen. Abdullahi Ishaq (rtd) said on Saturday, December 10, that some of late Shekau’s associates told him about his concubines after they surrendered and embraced peace.

    He said; “We started this non-kinetic approach 16th months ago, the model started shortly after the death of Abubakar Shekau and the state government didn’t want Islamic State of West African Province (ISWAP) to continue using the Shekau’s fighters; we know it would be deadly.

    “So, the first of fighter that I received in Bama told me that Shekau had 83 concubines, just imagine he left behind 83 concubines.

    “They said he is now in hell because he committed suicide during his clash with other fraction. He always told them go out and fights, if they die in the process several virgins are waiting for them.”

    Ishaq who also revealed that many of the fighters do not know how to perform ablution, added that they regret their action and also claim they were misled by Shekau.

    He said; “Let me say this, many of his commanders were bitter after he committed suicide because that act contradict what he preached. I can tell you that many of these fighters don’t know how to perform simple ablution not to talk of how to do prayers. We had to start teaching them after we brought them to Maiduguri.”

  • Dozen of terrorists  killed in Boko Haram, ISWAP clash

    Dozen of terrorists killed in Boko Haram, ISWAP clash

    The clash between Abubakar Shekau’s faction of the Boko Haram and Islamic State of West African Province (ISWAP), has left many terrorists dead in the northern part of the country.

    According to a counter-insurgency Expert and Security Analyst in the Lake Chad region, Zagazola Makama revealed that the notorious leader of Boko Haram, Ali Nguide led his foot soldiers to mountain Mandara to attack The Islamic State’s West Africa Province  (ISWAP) in a rivalry battle.

    Intelligence sources also told Makama that the clash began in the camp of Yuwe, which triggered a heavy firefight and Ngulde’s fighters overpowered the ISWAP elements and neutralized about 12 of them and seized their weapons.

    Shortly, sources said, the Boko Haram fighters quickly mobilized more fighters from Abu Ikilima’s camp at Gaizuwa, Gabchari, Mantari and Mallum Masari.

    Makama also explained that 23 ISWAP fighters were said to have been killed on December 4, adding that the Shekau’s faction divided themselves into two groups and raided ISWAP camps in Ukuba Arra and Sabil Huda.

    Zagazola understands that on Sunday night, reinforcement team of the ISWAP camps were sighted around the axis of Kawuri and Aulari, where in the morning on Monday a top ISWAP leader, Ba’ana Chingori, led a column of fighters to attack Boko Haram position in Farisu.

    The infight between the two terrorists factions has left dozens of fighters killed.

  • Victims of insurgency in Borno demand reparation

    Victims of insurgency in Borno demand reparation

    A survey conducted in Borno on transitional justice for victims of insurgency said most Boko Haram victims are demanding for reparation and apology.

    The survey on Stakeholders’ Perceptions on Periorities for Implementation of Transitional Justice in North-East, was undertaken by Allamin Foundation for Peace and Development, funded by UK Aid.

    Dr Lawan Gana, a consultant, who presented the report of the survey on Tuesday in Maiduguri, said that the victims asked that compensation be given to those who lost their source of livelihood.

    They also requested for “true healing and reconciliation”, in line with transitional justice, he said.

    According to Gana, these include apology, provision of economic empowerment programmes for victims, and access to healthcare and education for their children.

    He said the survey involved 446 victims from four Local Government Areas of Maiduguri Metropolitan, Dikwa, Gwoza and Bama.

    Gana pointed out that the victims also wanted government to play the lead in the reconciliation process, which should involve other stakeholders like security and religious leaders.

    He said that the survey recommended among others the establishment of a strengthened community accountability programme for transitional justice.

    It also recommended the development of exclusive transitional justice policy for Borno and an open declaration by ex-combatants to accept transitional justice.

    In her remarks, Hamsatu Allamin, Executive Director of the foundation, said the brief presentation of the findings on transitional justice to stakeholders was to give them the opportunity to make observations where necessary.

    Allamin noted that during the survey almost everyone was claiming to be victims, including some of the insurgents.

    She said one of the repentant Boko-Haram members, claimed that he was a victim because Customs officers allegedly seized his trailer loaded with goods and failed to get it released even after spending a lot of money.

    “He said that when he heard that there is a group (Boko-Haram) fighting injustice he decided to join them,” Allamin said.

    She observed that such complex situation would be best addressed through transitional justice.

    Transitional justice covers full range of processes and mechanisms associated with a society’s attempt to address legacy of large-scale past conflict, repression, violations and abuses.

    It is meant to ensure accountability, serve justice and achieve reconciliation, as well as provide recognition to victims, enhance the trust of individuals in State institutions, reinforce respect for human rights and promote the rule of law.

    The processes may include both judicial and non-judicial mechanisms, including truth-seeking, prosecution, reparation, and various measures to ensure reconciliation and prevent the recurrence of new violations.

  • Enemy at the Door – By Chidi Amuta

    Enemy at the Door – By Chidi Amuta

    (This piece was earlier published in the immediate aftermath of the July Kuje prison break in Abuja by ISWAP operatives and subsequent sporadic terrorist attacks in and around the Federal Capital. This week’s coordinated terror alerts by embassies of different Western countries in Abuja compel a re-run of the piece.)

    On the matter of ensuring national security by all means necessary, I accept being called a hawk. But on the concomitant cautious fear that bad things could happen to the nation if our defenses are lax, I will accept the title of coward. In short, a nation is entitled to deploy maximum force to ensure its continued sovereignty while constantly looking out to protect its citizens from those forces that do not wish both government and people well. Taken together, this is the contradiction that now defines our security imperative. Nothing better gives our situation more urgency than the clear consistent threat on the security of Abuja. Life, limbs and the very state are now at risk as the national capital is daily assaulted by an undisguised enemy force. And yet the embarrassing laxity of our defense and security forces in response to this existential threat dictates that we prepare for the worst and hope for the best.

    In the last couple of weeks, an enemy we are used to casually dismissing as a bunch of bandits has consistently targeted Abuja. Without fear of any contradiction, the forces of insecurity have coalesced into an enemy with a concerted strategic focus. The target of this adversary is clearly and unambiguously the sovereign heart of the Nigerian state. I am convinced that some evil force is out to hoist its nasty flag and shout a familiar bad slogan somewhere in the heart of Abuja.

    Only in the last fortnight, ISWAP terrorists have stormed and breached the Kuje medium security prison and freed an indeterminate number of inmates. These includd over 60 dangerous Boko Haram combatants. An operation that reportedly involved over 200 ISWAP operatives on motorbikes and which lasted a few hours has merely been explained away by an untidy exchange of blames and excuses by those paid to secure that facility. An embarrassed President Buari visited the broken prison and demanded a report on why our intelligence set up woefully failed to prevent the attack.

    Soon afterwards, alarms by some institutions in Abuja about imminent terrorist attacks have produced evidence that the enemy we fear to name is very much at the door. An elite Brigade of Guards patrol in the reported area of the Abuja Law School yielded a bloody ambush that has claimed the lives of a number of soldiers of the presidential guards unit. If the well trained and armed guards of the president cannot survive an attack by thi enemy force, what chance is there for the ordinary Abuja resident?

    Meanwhile a reported siege of a Federal Government high school in…a neighborhood of Abuja has alarmed school authorities into asking parents to evacuate their children from the school. In a reflex over reaction, authorities of the Federal Capital Authority have ordered a shut down of any number of private and public schools in and around Abuja as a preventive measure. There is no word as to for how long these unforeseen closures will last. I shtere a level of intelligence available to the officials ordering these closured that is not available to either commonsense or the public?

    As if that was not enough, only last Thursday evening, a roving unit of terrorists attacked an army checkpoint around Zuma Rock on the busy Abuja-Kaduna highway. Casualty figures remain hazy and conflicting. Predictably, these sporadic attacks in and around Abuja have created an understandable atmosphere of fear among the populace.

    Understandably, the president has taken some feeble action. He has met with his Security Council. The National Security Adviser has briefed a frightened and unsettled nation about steps being taken to tame terrorists and in particular defend Abuja. In an unusually candid admission, the NSA admitted that Nigerians have become weary of the security situation and the numerous official reassurances. By his admission, the public has incrementally lost confidence in the ability of the state to protect and defend the citizenry thereby making self-help and personal protection an increasingly attractive option.

    Mr. Monguno revealed that defense and security authorities are working on a new set of strategies to contain and combat the insecurity in the nation! After seven years of Buhari’s anti corruption and maximum security administration? The army has quickly reshuffled its commanders as if the mere moving of personnel and military furniture will translate into a fundamental strategic refocusing or tactical review of the old methods that have woefully failed us in the last seven years under a president with a military background.

    Clearly, the political leadership of the nation has been vastly deficient. Mr. Buhari has serially fallen short in the enormous powers which the Nigerian constitution give him as commander –in- chief. Moreso, for a president who was elected partly because he has a military background that was hoped would equip him to deal with the insecurity that preceded his ascendancy. However, given the present critical stage of the threat to national security , it would be a disservice to the nation for politicians to aggravate what is already and incendiary moment. Therefore, the six -week ultimatum given the president to fix the insecueity or face impeachment is an irresponsible political gambit. It is at best a cheap political blackmail with an intent to frighten an insecure president with a history of epic incompetence. At worst, the threat by senators of the opposition PDP has an inbuilt extortionist undertone that is familiar in Nigeria’s murky political culture of corruption and unbridled mercantilism. It is bad business to try and extort money out of a desperate national security emergency.

    Call my alert on the threat to Abuja baseless scare mongering if you like. But I see a clear strategic purpose in the pattern of recent attacks on facilities in and around Abuja. It ought to interest a perceptive public however that the government has never given the adversary a name. It is in fact the terrorists themselves who strike installations like the Kuje prison and reveal unapologetically through vivid videos that they are ISWAP. The government has been reluctant to admit either Boko Haram or ISWAP as the enemy against which they are fighting. The government just tags the attacks the handiwork of terrorists and moves on.

    The progressive advance of the enemy forces is by no means haphazard or just opportunistic. What we are witnessing is a clear purposive and directed movement of hostile actions even in an asymmetrical fashion which is typical of jihadist guerilla tactics. But the direction is obvious. It is governed by the territorial ambition of a movement intent on controlling a strategic swathe of territory from the Sahel to the larger West African Gulf of Guinea oceanfront. Nigeria is central to that calculation on account of its population and resource base. It has also become more attractive in recent times on account of the proven serial failures of the institutions of state and the weakness of national defense and security to stoutly defend the nation’s sovereignty.

    Some analysts have pointed at signs of collusion between elements in Nigeria’s security forces and the enabling financiers of Boko Haram and ISWAP. Some have seen signs of infiltration of intelligence sources and outright complicity between guardians of state security and defence and the enemy forces leading to ease of some of the operations. No one is certain that these suspicions are either true or totally false.

    What we can see is a clear purposive enlargement of the theatre of these attacks in the direction of Abuja as the centre of power in Nigeria. What started out in Borno state has spread throughout the entire North East. It has strayed into the North West and descended on the North Central zone in the North West zone, it has targeted Kaduna as the military industrial nerve centre of the nation and the last line of defense for Abuja. It has successfully tested the nerves of the Nigerian Defence Academy by killing and abducting some of its officers right on the campus.

    The enemy briefly knocked out the Kaduna airport by invading its perimeters and abducting some airport workers, thereby briefly closing the airport to many commercial airlines. It has made the Abuja- Kaduna highway untenable as a route for normal civil traffic. The enemy has severally attacked the rail link between Abuja and Kaduna and has knocked it out of the national civil transportation grid. It has taken out the rail link on the Abuja-Kaduna corridor while its rolling stock is marooned. Meanwhile, the Chinese loan that funded the rail line is gathering interest and charges while the project is returning zero revenue. Government has remained silent on when the rail link will reopen. And yet we remain silent on the identity and purpose of this enemy!

    The ISWAP/Boko Haram coalition forces have similarly zeroed in on states adjoining Abuja. In Niger state, for instance, the terrorists have taken over whole local governments and are exacting tributes, rents and levies from local populations. It attacked a miners in Shiroro and. killed over 30 soldiers and policemen that dared to challenge their abduction of Chinese miners. In the same week, an advance contingent of presidential staff on their way to president Buhari’s home town of Daura were attacked and a couple of them injured. A deliberate targeting of the president as the ultimate symbol of our national sovereignty cn only mean one thing: an arrow in the heart of the Nigerian nation.

    Those intent on diminishing the urgency and import of the obvious threat to Abuja and Nigeria’s sovereignty need to learn from recent jihadist takeovers and disruptions of nations in recent times. The dramatic fall of Kabul to the forces of the Taliban proceeded in similar fashion, At first the Taliban forces were concentrated far in the provinces, far away from the capital. Through a series of lightning raids and coordinated but sporadic attacks on major strategic routes to Kabul, they stunned both the government in Kabul as well as its supporting US military backers. All that American training, air power, hardware, logistics and communications backing were neutralized overnight. Taliban operatives who had effectively infiltrated the intelligence and defense architecture of the state merely streamed into an already softened and besieged Kabul.

    America retreated in stampede almost like in Saigon on April 30, 1975. All that sophisticated arsenal was reduced to a huge scrap yard of useless military technology that no one could use. All the generals with their fancy titles, epaulets and shiny medals were reduced to a horde of scampering cowards on the run. Many of them had long been in the payroll of both the Americans and the Taliban simultaneously. That lesson ought to be instructive to those paid to guard the secrets of Nigeria’s security and defence in today’s unfolding engagement.

    There may still be some residual professional muscle left in our military to confront our security nightmare. But the political interpretation of the crisis has bred a doctrinal anarchy and confusion of terminologies which is not helping those whose business it is to worry about Nigeria’s insecurity.

    The political leadership has finally agreed that the power base of the state is confronted by a terrorist onslaught. It took a while to officially pronounce the ISWAP/Boko Haram coalition a terrorist undertaking. But even that is hardly the whole truth by the strict characterization of terrorism. We are not dealing with mere sporadic terrorists. Terrorists strike at the soft underbelly of society’s complacent zones to disturb the peace, violently distort the norm and frighten the innocent. Terrorists storm train stations, airports, convert air planes into Kamikaze missiles, blow up restaurants, mosques, churches, night clubs and other places where society takes normalcy and tranquility for granted. These are the favorite targets of determined terrorists. As a rule, terrorists do not take territory or seek sovereignty over any place, peoples or things. They bomb, shoot or stab and instill horror through sudden violent acts. Thereafter, they move on, hoping not to be caught but leaving an unmistakable message through blood and tears. Their aim is to shock us all into an awareness of a cause or a cultural injury. The aim of terrorists is always to provoke the question: Why?. The hope is that the quest for answers will lead to some justice or atonement of an original injustice that has been etched into the mind of terrorist foot soldiers.

    Terrorists carry no maps or compasses. To do so would make their operations predictable and their trail obvious. All terrorists are unhinged agents of the devil, satan’s foot soldiers with neither direction nor compass. In some cases, they decorate their violence with a sectarian creed in order to keep their followership and attract new devotees. Sectarian terrorism is best rooted out by political means from its creedal source not massaged by silly palliatives and symbolic amnesties.

    Let us make no mistake about it. In Nigeria, we are not confronted by transactional bandits merely out to collect loose cash to assuage their socio economic deprivation and flee the trade after making enough money. Of course there are criminal bandit elements in our mix of sundry trouble makers. But those ones merely frighten innocent people, take hostages, rape women, demand ransom and sometimes storm schools, transit buses, trains and isolated motorists. Banditry is bad violent entrepreneurship gone out of control. But the majority of those we call bandits are recruits of the ISWAP/Boko Haram enterprise. The ransoms collected by bandits go to swell the war chest of the larger jihadist enterprise. Criminal banditry is easy to root out. Take out the gangster chieftains and you are likely to exterminate the ring. But systemic jihadist banditry has an almost limitless pool of recruits and is therefore self -renewing.

    Nigeria’s more strategic insecurity is therefore a local off -shoot and subset of the larger ISIS global jihadist terrorist network. In its Sahelian iteration, ISIS has metamorphosed into ISWAP/Boko Haram which has swallowed up Boko Haram and other isolated local chapters. That is why it became necessary and urgent for ISWAP to exterminate Abubakar Shekau and the leadership of Boko Haram. It has territorial ambition. It has political and strategic purpose. It has a sectarian dressing to appeal to innocent hearts and minds. It has a geo- strategic design. Its operations have a strategic compass and political map. What is unfolding in Nigeria especially the virtual siege on Abuja are the manifestations of these more concerted purposes and larger designs hence the concerted international concern. We need to key into the international onslaught to save our nation instead of this laughable grand standing by marionette minions of state power.

  • Conversation Nigeriana (8) – By Hope O’Rukevbe Eghagha

    Conversation Nigeriana (8) – By Hope O’Rukevbe Eghagha

    Obukohwo: All the victims, innocent travellers between Abuja and Kaduna, kidnapped by the vagabond train terrorists have been set free at last!

    Dupe: Praise the Lord!

    Bankole: Released or set free after payment of ransoms?

    Dupe: Whatever! I just praise God that they have been reunited with their families! No one is sure that ransom was paid!

    Obukohwo: Sadly, three days after they were set free, one of the victims was killed by another set of bandits while on his way home to Kebbi! To add insult to injury, one of his relations who had travelled to rejoice with him was kidnapped!

    Dupe: Wickedness in high places. Was this a coincidence or it was arranged by the same morons who kidnapped him before?

    Obukohwo: No one knows the truth. What is happening in Nigeria is pregnant and nursing a baby at the same time. Now they will ask for a ransom!

    Bulama: By paying ransoms to criminals, this government has made abductions a profitable venture. Some security officials have joined in the kidnapping business. For example, it was reported that the DSS once arrested an unnamed soldier for hiring guns to kidnappers for N300,000! We cannot correctly estimate how much has been paid to kidnappers by governments and private citizens! It must be in billions!

    Obukohwo: That’s why they can purchase arms and ammunition to threaten the seat of government and the governor of Kaduna State!

    Bulama: I won’t lose any sleep if the diminutive fellow of Kaduna State and his wild son are abducted by the terrorists whom they created. Their utterances are usually filthy and arrogant, unbecoming of people of stature!

    Obukohwo: Stature? What stature? Please spare me…Fela called such people VIPs!

    Dupe: It’s not enough to wish them evil please. To be kidnapped is a nightmarish experience. I’m still seeing a clinical psychologist two years after my kidnap!

    Obukohwo: Serious?

    Dupe: Yes oo! That’s subject for another day!

    Emeka: Paying ransoms is bad enough. But the word is out that they federal government did a swap with the terrorists!

    Obukohwo: What do you mean?

    Emeka: So, there were some terrorists arrested in the past who were in different jails, both in Abuja and Lagos. To secure the release of the last twenty-three abductees, the government released all the terrorists who had been detained for criminal activities!

    Bulama: Nooooo!

    Emeka: Yeeees! We are in trouble in this country. A civil rights advocacy organisation HURIWA issued a press release in which they asserted that ‘the latest antics of the regime of President Buhari in the reported release of over 100 Boko Haram terrorists from the Kirikiri Prison shows the total absence of transparency and accountability in the fight on terror’.

    Dupe: We knew when Sheikh Gumi’s aide Tukur Mamu was negotiating with the terrorists and securing the release of abductees in batches.

    Bankole: Yes, indeed, Gumi himself started the negotiations and started uttering rubbish words from his mouth which showed sympathy for the terrorists. Indeed, in February 2021 after visiting some bandits in Gummi and Shinkafi Local Government areas in Zamfara State, Gumi called on the government to negotiate with terrorists to ‘bring an end to banditry and kidnappings in the country! Later he got angry and said he would not negotiate with the terrorists anymore! Some people do not understand the concept of the modern State. then his aide Mamu took over. Mamu was arrested in Egypt after a request by DSS, brought back to Nigeria and detained indefinitely. Apparently, he was doing nefarious business with the bandits. The official statement is that he must ‘answer critical questions on ongoing investigations relating to some security matters in parts of the country’.

    Emeka: Can you imagine a citizen going into the forests to meet with criminals and then coming back to urge the government to negotiate with thieves!

    Obukohwo: The thought of it galls me!

    Bankole: If it had been an Igbo man that went to negotiate with IPOB the world would have crashed on him! See the speed with which he outlawed IPOB and went after Sunday Igboho and Nnamdi Kanu. But his herder brothers roam the country with AK47s attached to their body!

    Obukohwo: it is sad that Buhari who campaigned on a national platform and got a broad mandate in 2015 is leaving office as a clannish president. What an antithesis!

    Bulama: Our rulers do not care about legacies!

    Bankole: They have no sense of history. Perhaps in their subconscious minds the country will not endure and so there is no need to create national legacies! So, this accounts for the absence of national heroes. We do not have them anymore. Murtala Mohammed tried. Even IBB created a national image for himself.

    Bulama: Yes, the era of heroes is over; they civil war created heroes both on the Nigerian and Biafran sides.

    Emeka: True, when Wole Soyinka went to the Southeast in 1967 to hold a meeting with Biafran leader Emeka Ojukwu to try dissuading him from the war, General Gowon arrested him upon his return and kept the man in detention, solitary confinement, for two years and some months. Soyinka became an instant world celebrity. Prisoner of Conscience he was called, and his pictures were all over the world.

    Bankole: Even Ojukwu was a hero too. Heroic villainy. But if he had fought Nigeria to a standstill the way little Ukraine has contained the almighty Russia, he would have been a hero forever!

    Obukohwo: But at the end of the war, Gowon said there was no victor, no vanquished!

    Emeka: On paper yes! The Igbo were vanquished. They were punished and are still being punished decades after the war. How much were they given in exchange for their monies? Some powerbrokers keep using the war to argue against an Igbo President!

    Bulama: There are too many unsettled issues about Nigeria!

    Dupe: We need to redefine Nigeria, interrogate it, and agree on how we want to live together. The presidency must be rotated between north and south for example.

    Emeka: We must restructure the country and make the central government less powerful. No president should sit in Abuja and call the shots in my local government area in the Niger Delta; no federal government should try to control water resources because it wants to make the water in my village available to herders from all over Africa.

    Bulama: No one will try that fa! But let us discuss the bandits and unknown gunmen operating freely and brutally in the southeast. Who are those scoundrels? What do they want? Why are they killing their kith and kin like fowl?

    Emeka: My brother, it is a serious matter. There is breakdown of law and order in Anambra and Imo States. We no longer hold elaborate burial ceremonies without settling the gunmen!

    Bankole: You mean they are not anonymous?

    Emeka: I don’t know what to say anymore. Sometimes, people in the villages will advise you to part with some money before you organise a ceremony. I don’t know where the money goes. But most of the perpetrators are local boys. Why they turn on their own, their successful brothers and sisters who have no dealings with government baffles me.

    Bulama: It is the same in the north. The bandits kill people of all faiths. That is the reason we keep stressing that bandits are criminals. There is nothing Islamic about Boko Haram or ISWAP. They are bloody criminals using Islam as a front.

    Bankole: The federal government does not have the will to deal ruthlessly with the criminals for reasons I don’t know. Buhari has been a big disappointment to all, including his faithful APC supporters though they will not say this in public.

    Dupe: It is no secret. Each time the Tinubu people campaign and make promises to improve security, they indirectly indict Buhari and his people in government.

    Emeka: The country must go back to factory reset!

  • Just In: ISWAP terrorists ambush security operatives, kill, injure officers in Borno

    Just In: ISWAP terrorists ambush security operatives, kill, injure officers in Borno

    Terrorists of the Islamic State backed faction of Boko Haram, the Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP), formerly known as Jamā’at Ahl as-Sunnah lid-Da’wah wa’l-Jihād, have killed two Civilian Joint Task Force (CJTF) members in Borno State.

    According to Zagazola Makama, a Counter Insurgency Expert and Security Analyst in the Lake Chad, the two other members of the CJTF were also injured.

    The security operatives were said to be ambushed by the terrorists in the early hours of Tuesday between Pulka and Ngoshe in Gwoza Local Government Area.

    At least two members of the Civilians Joint Task Force lost their lives while two others injured when they came under ambush by Boko Haram in the early hours of Tuesday Oct 11. Between Pulka and Ngoshe in Gwoza LGA.

    “The injured were evacuated to Bama for medical attention,” he said.

    Since the death of JAS leader, Abubakar Shekau, ISWAP has been consolidating its grip in locations around Lake Chad.

    The sect’s membership has swollen with the defection of hundreds of Boko Haram fighters under Shekau.

    The Nigerian Army has repeatedly claimed that the insurgency has been largely defeated.

    The terror group has caused over 100,000 deaths and displaced millions of individuals mainly in Adamawa, Borno, and Yobe states.

  • Army arrest Soldier collaborating with terrorists

    Army arrest Soldier collaborating with terrorists

    The Nigerian Army has arrested another soldier said to be involved in collaborating with terrorists in the country.

    The soldier whose name has been given as Iorliam Emmanuel, reportedly in his 30s and hails from Benue state was getting hold off on Tuesday.

    Emmanuel is a member of the 156 Task Force Battalion (Operation Hadin Kai) in Mainok town.

    Mainok, 60km from the capital Maiduguri, is the headquarters of Kaga Local Government Area of Borno State.

    Emmanuel was caught with ammunition, concealed in a bag and clothing tied around his waist.

    A trending video shows colleagues exposing the bullets the suspect stuffed inside and underneath his uniform.

    He is expected to face court martial for sneaking military supplies to terror gangs.

    Recall that recently the Nigerian Army also caught a soldier assisting Boko Haram/Islamic State’s West Africa Province (ISWAP).

    The Army said Lance Corporal Jibrin, an instructor, committed suicide while being escorted to the barracks.

    Intelligence had exposed Jibrin’s involvement in the killings at some relaxation spots in Yobe State in April.

    The attacks in Geidam and Gashua towns occurred within five days and claimed the lives of about 10 people.