Tag: boko haram

  • BREAKING: Boko Haram kills 11 in Maiduguri — police

    Eleven people were killed when Boko Haram gunmen and suicide bombers launched a rare combined attack in Maiduguri, police said on Thursday.

    Borno state police commissioner Damian Chukwu said one civilian was killed as locals in the Jiddari Polo area of the city fled the insurgents, while 10 were killed nearby in three separate suicide blasts.

    Recall TheNewsGuru.com had earlier published that the insurgents attacked Maiduguri, causing many residents to abandon their houses, despite assurances from security operatives.

     

    AFP

  • Residents flee as Boko Haram invade Maiduguri [Video]

    Boko Haram insurgents on Wednesday attacked Maiduguri, capital of Borno State.

    It was learnt that they engaged security officials in a gun battle that lasted for hours.

    It was gathered that many residents fled their houses, despite assurances from security operatives.

    Watch video of residents fleeing their communities:

  • Boko Haram : I have no case to answer – Ndume

    Boko Haram : I have no case to answer – Ndume

    The suspended majority leader in the senate, Ali Ndume standing trial on terrorism on alleged terrorism funding has told the federal high court in Abuja that he has no case to answer in the 4 count charges brought against him by the federal government.

    Ndume told Justice Kolawole that the government has not in anyway established a prima facie case against him or link him with any crime.

    In a no case submission argued by his counsel Rickey Tarfa SAN, Ndume insisted that the charges brought against him by the government since November 30, 2011 has not been proved beyond reasonable doubt as required by law at the end of the prosecution case.

    The senator admitted that he had contact with the dreaded boko haram sect and that the contact came into being, when he was appointed into presidential committee on security matters by the govt to negotiate for peace with the terrorist group.

    He maintained that the charges against him were unjust and unfair because he passed the report of his contact with the terrorist to the then, Vice President . Namadi Sambo and the then Director General of Department of State Service (DSS).

    Ndume further told the court that the charge of failure to disclose info on the workings of boko haram cannot be sustained against him because the prosecution did not link any evidence to that effect.

    “Clearly from the totality of the evidence adduced by the prosecution, there is no ingredients of the charges proved as required by law. The analysis of the mobile phones seized from the defendant and subjected to forensic examination did not reveal any offence committed”, the counsel held.

    However the prosecution counsel Grace Okafor urged the court to compel Ndume to open his defense in the charges against on the account that the govt witnesses have effectively link him with the crime.

    The prosecution said that the charge against Ndume has to do with the failure to disclose material information to the security agents on boko haram and rendering support to the terrorist group adding that the Ndume in his own statements tendered and admitted in court confirm that he had enormous info on boko haram which he refused to disclose to government.

    Justice Kolawole after taking arguments from the two parties adjourned ruling to July 4, 2017.

    It would be recalled that the federal government had arraigned Ndume for allegedly sponsoring the activities of the dreaded boko haram sect.

  • Boko Haram: Restored relationship with neighbouring countries helped our success – Osinbajo

    Acting President Yemi Osinbajo has attributed successes being recorded by the military against Boko Haram insurgency to the restoration of cordial relations with Nigeria’s neighbours, including Chad, Cameroon and Niger.

    Osinbajo, in a nationwide broadcast on Monday to commemorate the second anniversary of President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration, said the government had re-organized and equipped the armed forces, and inspired them to heroic feats.

    He said that in addition to mending broken relations with the country’s allies, the Buhari administration had also revitalized the regional Multi-national Joint Task Force, by providing the required funding and leadership.

    He said that the terrorist group which openly challenged the sovereignty and continued existence of Nigeria through killing, maiming, and abduction, causing the displacement of the largest number of citizens had now been routed.

    “With new leadership and renewed confidence, our gallant military immediately began to put Boko Haram on the back foot.

    “We have restored broken-down relations with our neighbours – Chad, Cameroon and Niger – allies without whom the war against terror would have been extremely difficult to win.

    “The positive results are clear for all to see. In the last two years, no fewer than one million displaced persons have returned home.

    “One hundred and six of our daughters from Chibok have regained their freedom after more than two years in captivity, in addition to the thousands of other captives who have since tasted freedom.

    “Schools, hospitals and businesses are springing back to life across the North-East, especially in Borno, the epicentre of the crisis. Farmers are returning to the farms from which they fled in the wake of Boko Haram.

    “Finally, our people are getting a chance to begin the urgent task of rebuilding their lives.’’

    On agitations in some parts of the country, Osinbajo revealed that the Buhari administration had engaged with local communities with a view to understanding their grievances, and to create solutions to their challenges.

    He said, “across the country, in the Niger Delta, and in parts of the North-Central region, we are engaging with local communities to understand their grievances, and to create solutions that respond to these grievances adequately and enduringly.’’

    According to him, President Buhari’s new vision for the Niger Delta is a comprehensive peace, security and development plan that will ensure that the people benefit fully from the wealth of the region.

    “We have seen to it that it is the product of deep and extensive consultations, and that it has now moved from idea to execution.

    “Included in that New Vision is the long-overdue environmental clean-up of the Niger Delta beginning with Ogoniland, which we launched last year,’’ he added.

    On persistent farmers/herdsmen unrest across the country, the acting president announced that the Federal Government had started working with state governments and relevant security agencies in designing effective strategies and interventions to end the menace.

    According to him, the Buhari administration is determined to ensure that anyone who uses violence or carries arms without legal authority is apprehended and sanctioned.

     

     

    NAN

  • Army raid Boko Haram cell, arrest kidnapper of late Monguno

    Army raid Boko Haram cell, arrest kidnapper of late Monguno

    The Nigerian Army said it raided a Boko Haram cell at Mokwa and its environs in Niger State on Thursday and arrested three leaders of the terrorist group.

    The army spokesman, Sani Usman, who disclosed this in a statement on Friday, named the suspects as Mustapha Muhammed (Adam Bitri), Ali Saleh and Uba Mohammed.

    Mr. Usman, a brigadier general, said they were picked up at their hideout at Gidan Mai village on Mokwa-Tegina road.

    Preliminary investigation has confirmed that one of the terrorists, Mustapha Muhammed (Adam Bitri), along with one Bakura (at large), was among the group of the Boko Haram terrorists that kidnapped the late elder statesman, Alhaji Shettima Ali Monguno, in Maiduguri on May 13, 2013.

    Items recovered from them include Automated Teller Machines debit cards, Voter Registration cards, National Identity Cards, various mobile telephones and bank tellers, among other items.

    The terrorists are currently being further interrogated”, Usman said.

    (NAN)

  • War against Boko Haram not over – Obasanjo

    War against Boko Haram not over – Obasanjo

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo has said the war against the deadly terrorist sect, Boko Haram is not over.

    The former Nigerian leader also urged the international community to help tackle the humanitarian crisis in the North East.

    “We call on the international community for help. Yes, the Boko Haram terrorists are on the run, but the Boko Haram menace has not been completely solved,” he said at the donation of 35,930 kilograms of seeds by the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA), to Borno State Government in Maiduguri on Monday.

    Obasanjo, an IITA Ambassador, said the international community had great role to play in ensuring food security in the region.

    “We have to tell the world that our problem in the North East is not our inability to feed ourselves because we are lazy.

    “Our problem has to do with the menace of Boko Haram and the insecurity that we have to face for the past years”, he said.

    Obasanjo commended Gov​ernor​ Kashim Shettima for his numerous achievements in agriculture in spite of the Boko Haram insurgency.

    “When I came in to the Farm Center, I saw this line of tractors, 1000 of them, I also saw combined harvesters complete with their implements.

    “What stuck my mind was that we need to tell the world that our problem in the North-East is not because people are not willing or ready to work in agriculture.

    “It has to do with the insecurity associated with the Boko Haram insurgency”, he said.

    In his address, Shettima thanked the former president for the visit and ​for ​identifying with Borno people​.

    He said​ most of the Internally Displaced Persons, IDPs had started returning back to their liberated communities.

    Shettima​ noted that the provision of new improved varieties of maize, rice, millet, soyabean, sorghum, cowpea​,​ will go along way in completing efforts of the state government in its agricultural revolutionary drive address unemployment and hunger, and promised continued partnership with his government and IITA.

     

  • Freed Chibok Girls: ‘We did not pay a dime to Boko Haram’ – FG

    Freed Chibok Girls: ‘We did not pay a dime to Boko Haram’ – FG

    The Federal Government on Monday denied a report released by the BBC that it paid the sum of two million euros to Boko Haram to secure the release of the 82 school girls abducted by the Islamic terrorist group in 2014 in Chibok, Borno State.

    The Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed made the denial on behalf of the Federal Government.

    Mohammed insisted that apart from the five commanders of the group that were freed, no other deal was reached.

    According to him “Apart from the five Boko Haram commanders, the exchange of which we have already made public, no other concession was made.

    Any other thing to the contrary is absolutely false.

    I emphatically deny on behalf of the Federal Government that any sum of ransom was paid in exchange of the 82 Chibok girls.”

     

  • Tension as Boko Haram beheads four IDPs in Borno

    The deadly terrorist sect, Boko Haram, on Saturday beheaded four internally displaced persons, IDPs, in Dalori-1 Camp of Maiduguri, Borno State.

    They were reportedly beheaded while hunting outside the camp.

    The four victims were on Sunday buried by their fellow displaced persons.

    Two other IDPs who were among a 12-man hunting troop were yet to be accounted for on Sunday evening.

    According to a report by Premium Times, it took a search team to find the four beheaded bodies some few kilometres from the Dalori camp along the Maiduguri-Bama road.

    Sources familiar with the incident said the attacked IDPs who were also volunteer members of the local vigilante, Civilian-JTF, often go to the bush to hunt for games which they either cook to beef up their protein needs or sell to earn some cash.

    It was supposed to be another normal hunting day for the 12 men on Saturday, but unfortunately, they ran into a gang of Boko Haram insurgents who attacked and beheaded four of them.

    Six of the IDP hunters managed to run back late afternoon of Saturday to inform us at the camp that they were attacked by Boko Haram fighters”, said an IDP from Bama who identified himself as Alai Goni.

    When we waited for the six others to return and they did not, we decided to go in search for them. About 6km away from the camp, we came to a riverbank and we saw a man watering his horse. The man simply pointed to us where the corpses of the four slain men were dumped. We became suspicious of him and we had to arrest him and bring him to the security personnel at the gate of Dalori-1 camp.

    Unfortunately, we could not immediately find the decapitated heads of three of them; we only found three bodies without their heads, while the fought one whose head was not separated from his body, had some kind of sharp word forcefully driven into his forehead.”

    The source said the heads of the four beheaded persons were later found early Sunday morning, after which they were prepared for burial at about 9 a.m.

    Unfortunately, we have not heard from the other two missing IDPs and we are not sure if they are still alive or dead”, he said.

    Dalori camp is about 1.5km from the University of Maiduguri that has been a target for Boko Haram suicide bombers in the past weeks.

    The leader of the Civilian-JTF, Abba Kalli, who also confirmed the incident, blamed the victims for embarking on such “dangerous expedition”, after they had been severally warned that it was dangerous for them to wander away from the camp.

    It was indeed a sad occurrence for us yesterday,” he said.

    Four of them were beheaded; two were captured and taken away, while the rest six managed to escape. We have severally warned them going even 2km kilometres away from their camps in that axis is very dangerous because the Boko Haram insurgents were there in the bush. But they refused to heed to warning, by insisting on going to hunt in the bush”.

    They have been buried according to the Islamic rite this morning,” said Kalli who confirmed that the slain victims were all IDPs from Bama who later volunteered to be members of the Civilian-JTF.

    The slain persons were named Wali Fanne, Ibrahim, Chacha, and Baba Karemi.

    Residents living around the camp, have expressed concern over the increasing attacks around Maiduguri, as they called on the state government and security operatives to increase surveillance in that part of the Borno capital that is increasingly becoming porous for Boko Haram attacks.

     

  • Troops kill 13 Boko Haram terrorists, capture 10 logistics officials

    Troops kill 13 Boko Haram terrorists, capture 10 logistics officials

    Nigerian troops fighting Boko Haram on Saturday said they killed 13 terrorists and arrested 10 others engaged in smuggling in supplies for the group.

    This was revealed in a statement signed and released by the deputy director, public relations, 8 Task Force Division, Col. Timothy Antigha.

    In the ongoing clearance operation around the fringes of Lake Chad, troops of 8 Task Force Division have continued to hit the few remaining Boko Haram hideouts and what is left of their logistics holding.”

    Antigha, a colonel, said, “In the last 72 hours, gallant troops operating in Chikun Gudu, Tumbuma Karami and Tumbuma Baba have neutralized 13 Boko Haram terrorists, while many others escaped with gunshot wounds.

    Similarly, troops recovered 3 AK 47 and 1 pump action riffles, assorted riffle magazines and 306 rounds of ammunition, tool box, deep freezer and a Toyota gun truck. In the same vein, troops destroyed 2 other Toyota Hilux vehicles, 1 Toyota truck, 2 Motorcycles and 6 bicycles.

    In a related development, troops of 242 Battalion, acting on a tip off, rounded up 10 suspected Boko Haram smugglers. The suspects comprising 6 females and 4 males were arrested in Monguno and Nolwodo Malgori with assorted house – hold items, food stuff and 63, 060 Naira cash.

    The suspects are being profiled to determine the extent of their involvement in Boko Haram insurgency.”

     

  • Boko Haram: Of Sugar Coated Lies and Poisonous Potions

    Boko Haram: Of Sugar Coated Lies and Poisonous Potions

    By: Anthony Kolawole

    The most dangerous level of lying is when the liar becomes addicted to manipulating the truth to an extent that he begins to believe his own lies as the truth. According to Vladimir Lenin, “A lie told often enough becomes the truth.”

    Therein lies the danger to the society because history is forever distorted when such lies, presented as truth, go unchallenged as the future generations would read perverted accounts of events and would be non the wiser for it. It is this concept that convener of ENDS (Every Nigerian Do Something) terrorist sympathizer, Perry Brimah, sought to explore in his treatise that claimed that Jonathan defeated Boko Haram while President Muhammadu Buhari mopped up.

    It is no surprise that Brimah got the brief to market evil as good. He has a track record in managing spin albeit unsuccessfully. His resume includes presenting fanatical members of the Islamic Movement in Nigeria (IMN) as victims and martyrs that are being oppressed by a repressive Federal Republic of Nigeria. The only problem? The group is an outlawed entity that a competent Judicial Panel deemed as militarized and radical. So is his brand of truth that it sought to misinform about a judicial panel.

    Except he can prove otherwise, the essence of Brimah’s latest venture is to wrongly credit the disastrous government of former President Goodluck Jonathan with defeating an insurgency he helped aggravated. Given the mind boggling tales of malfeasance that surface daily about that dark era, Brimah’s lies fall in the realm of the ultimate insult. It is even more irresponsible that he unskillfully tried to mask the lies with a generous dose of half truths and those truths that cannot be wished away.

    The truths in this case include his account of the initial blame game and ethnic biases that dominated the early days of Boko Haram becoming feral. As he noted, Jonathan was indifferent to the extent that he concluded the terror group was a creation of Nigerians in the north and they can kill themselves for all he cared. It was in the same period that the then opposition leader and now President Muhammadu Buhari expressed concerns at the way innocent people were being caught in the crossfire on the few occasions that the Army

    Jonathan commanded fought the terrorists. This truth does not however offer any mitigation for the half lies that followed.
    For instance, Brimah, defender of human rights and freedom of the people, rues the decision of Jonathan to only impose a limited “half-baked” state of emergency in Borno state when he finally roused from his self induced slumber to act.

    The version emergency rule that this activists had wanted was for an elected governor to be sacked by an equally elected president. It was a misadventure under one time President Olusegun Obasanjo, which the law courts have put to rest as illegal. The implication of his preferred approach is that the Convener of ENDS absolutely has no regard for the constitution and would rather it is discarded to pave way for the hounding of people that are not in his good book.

    Another half truth is presenting the refusal of the United States’ Barack Obama to sell military hardwares to the Jonathan led Nigeria and further blocking other countries from doing so. One, the Armed Forces under Jonathan barely followed rules of engagement, which resulted in accusations of human rights abuse, a justification that Brimah’s ally, Amnesty International explored to pursue the blockage of arms sales to Nigeria.

    The problem of human rights abuses created under Jonathan was to remain a burden for the military until the government of President Buhari was able to reverse the trend. Two, the pervasive corruption and pathological theft of state resources on an industrial scale under Jonathan was another justification for the US blocking arms sales. Although many of us criticized the US at that time, with the benefit of the what is known as “Dasukigate”, Nigerians and indeed the world now knows better.

    That the former National Security Adviser (NSA), Sambo Dasuki, circulated pictures of hardware supposedly purchased by the Jonathan government is something for which he should separately stand trial. First, the pictures were mostly photoshopped jobs of images stolen from the internet; if these hardware were procured as stated he should tender them as evidence in his ongoing trial instead of challenging the jurisdiction of the court and seeking technicalities to explain the theft of $2.3 billion.

    Secondly, which competent NSA would openly advertise his latest acquisition when that would provide the needed information to his enemies, which would help them modify their attack strategies?

    The lies won’t stop coming. Why should we praise the clueless one for attempting to solve a problem he worsened in the first place. In the almost six years he could have done something meaningful he did not: he could have at least prevented the terror group from going ballistic like it did even if he did not stamp it out.

    Instead, as Brimah himself admitted, he was exploiting Boko Haram as a political tool for regional suppression and as a constant subhead for stealing money. At some point, when it became clear that he would roundly lose any election, he was hinted to have considered using Boko Haram as cover not to hold elections – he later proved this by using it as a cover to shift the polls in the hope that he would recover some ground before votes are cast.

    To justify the postponement of the elections, the army that was largely demoralized under him was for the first time ordered to fight and show some result for PR benefits. The proof? Boko Haram usually returns to any town or village the Jonathan commanded Army liberated.

    By the way, these tales of liberated places under Jonathan came at a price higher than paying $350 per night to mercenaries who would normally be standing trial in their home country for committing crimes; we also paid the price of suffering the indignity of leaving our affairs in the hands of people who would find a way for the crisis to persist so that they can continue to get paid.

    As for the stories of the places that Brimah considered as liberated under Jonathan, one only needs ask why he refused to do a victory lap to the place and why IDPs did not immediately return there. He should also explain why the military under President Buhari had to liberate these places a second time.

    Had Jonathan won the election, would he have bothered about the mopping up that Brimah is now dismissing as inconsequential. If a mopping up is not done and the liberated places demined would it have qualified as defeat of the terror group?

    It is comical that Brimah, who is one of those chanting the anthem that Boko Haram cannot be considered defeated, has now changed gear to claim that they were defeated under the previous government. This double standard on an unprecedented scale.

    While we may be already accustomed to Brimah’s penchant for distorting facts to suit his current brief, this treatise of his should put Nigerians on alert because like the gathering of clouds that precede storms, articles like this from Brimah indicate that there is a major offensive in the offing against the state.

    His article is the poisonous potion intended to numb the public consciousness to the realities of the dark days that his hero, Goodluck Jonathan, brought Nigeria to the precipe. Beyond the now, the article is further intended to poison history and archives so that future generations will be fed lies.

    We must therefore not encourage Brimah, or any other person for that matter, to continue repeating lies to the extent that they begin to sound like the truth. What is needed is to call him out on this distortion of the Boko Haram defeat story. We must call him out on any future manipulation of truth he may get the brief to carry out.

    Kolawole PhD, a University teacher contributed this piece from Keffi, Nasarawa State.