Tag: Borno

  • Zulum urges recruitment of more youths into civilian JTF

    Zulum urges recruitment of more youths into civilian JTF

    BORNO State Governor Babagana Zulum on Sunday traveled to Zabarmari, where he joined hundreds of villagers in the funeral prayers and burial of the 43 farmers killed on their farmlands on Saturday by Boko Haram.

    During the funeral, Zulum, was told by the villagers that they believed that the death toll was higher as some of their kinsmen and women were still missing.

    “Your Excellency, as you have seen here, 43 bodies were buried, but others have not been retrieved from the scene of the incident. Nobody can tell you the exact number of people killed. Some of the victims are still missing,” said a spokesperson for the villagers.

    While addressing the villagers, Zulum expressed regret that both hunger and Boko Haram insurgents were ravaging his people.

    The governor called on the Federal Government to recruit more Borno youths as members of the Civilian Joint Task Force (CJTF) and civil defense corps to serve as Agro Rangers to protect the people.

    He expressed his condolences and sympathies to the bereaved families and the people of the area.

    Zulum said: “First of all, accept my deepest sympathy over this carnage, once again, that affects all of us and every human with a conscience. I am told some persons are still missing. We have been discussing with the military since yesterday, Insha Allah, the remaining people will be traced soon.

    “We are still appealing to the Federal Government to ensure recruitment of more of our youths in the CJTF so that they can form a part of the Agro Rangers that will protect farmers.

    “We need many boots to protect farmlands and our youths understand the terrain. We will not lose hope because we have to remain optimistic about ending the insurgency.”

    He told reporters after the burial that it was sad that the people of Borno State were faced with the dilemma of survival from hunger and Boko Haram.

    “It is disheartening that more than 40 citizens were slaughtered while they were working in their farmlands. Our people are in very difficult situations, they are in two different extreme conditions, in one side they stay at home they may be killed by hunger and starvation, on the other, they go out to their farmlands and risk getting killed by the insurgents. This is very sad,” the governor lamented.

    Zulum, whose colleague in Kwara State, AbdulRazaq, commiserated however challenged Borno people to remain optimistic even in the face of the insecurity.

    Also on Sunday. farmers in the state and the Coalition of Northern Groups (CNG) flayed the incident..

    The farmers expressed anger over the incident and called on the Federal government to take proactive measures to save them.

    They advised the Federal Government against leaving the killings unaddressed.

    The Managing Director of Wal-Wanne Group, Dr Abiso Kabir, signed a statement on behalf. of the farmers.

    The statement partly reads: “About 43 farmers have been buried but we are not sure these are the exact numbers that are dead because some people are still missing.

    “We are tired of the situation, just when we thought we have gotten our farmlands back to support agricultural development and fight hunger in the country, we keep waking up to sad events.

    “We can’t continue to go out to our farmlands and risk being killed by the insurgents.”

  • Boko Haram killed 110 Nigerian farmers, not 43 in Borno – UN

    The United Nations has said at least 110 farmers were killed by Boko Haram insurgents in the northeast.

    The figure nearly tripled the 43 farmers that were initially reported killed by the insurgents on Saturday.

    French newswire AFP cited UN humanitarian coordinator in Nigeria Edward Kallon as saying on Sunday afternoon that at least 110 people were killed.

    Earlier on Sunday, Governor Babagana Zulum of Borno had admitted more bodies were yet to be recovered from the village where the terrorists attacked rice farmers.

    The governor led other leaders in Zabarmari to bury 43 bodies that were retrieved on Saturday.

    President Muhammadu Buhari has condemned the attack as ‘insane,’ saying the armed forces had all the resources needed to protect lives and Nigerian territory.

  • Troops raid terrorists’ hideouts, eliminate 5 in Borno

    Troops raid terrorists’ hideouts, eliminate 5 in Borno

    Troops of Operation Fire Ball have eliminated five Boko Haram (BHT)/ISWAP terrorists and recovered a cache of arms and ammunition as well as bags of assorted grains in recent attacks on their hideouts in Borno.

    The Acting Director, Defence Media Operations, Brig.-Gen. Benard Onyeuko, disclosed this in statement on Sunday.

    Onyeuko said that Operation Fire Ball, a subsidiary of Operation Lafiya Dole, had continued to clear terrorists from their identified enclaves in the North East.

    He said the troops of Army Super Camp 11 Gamboru-Ngala, on Nov. 27, overran the terrorists’ hideout at Garal and Bulankesa Villages.

    He said that the troops eliminated two terrorists in the encounter while others fled in disarray with fatal injuries.

    Onyeuko said that troops deployed in Pulka also raided a terrorists’ logistics base at Ashigashiya on Friday, killing two terrorists while others escaped with debilitating gunshot wounds.

    According to him, bags of assorted grains and other food items were recovered and the logistics warehouse was destroyed.

    “Similarly, troops of 27 Task Force Brigade also laid in wait for some suspected BHT/ISWAP criminals around Doksa general area same day.

    “Troops engaged the criminals with superior gun fire, forcing the terrorists to flee into the Bush in disarray.

    “In the aftermath of the encounter, one terrorist was neutralised while items such as one AK 47 rifle, two mobile phones, one bow and arrow and Boko Haram Terrorists pass slip were recovered.

    “The recovered items are in custody for profiling,” he said.

    The military Spokesperson said the military high command had commended the troops for their dedication and determination to flush the remnants of the terrorists from their hideouts.

    He also encouraged the troops not to relent but build on the successes recorded so far.

    He also assured that the high command was determined to rout the remnants of Boko Haram/ISWAP criminals from their enclaves.

  • Borno killing: Activists, Aisha Yesufu, Adeyanju, others humiliate Buhari on social media, demand his resignation

    Borno killing: Activists, Aisha Yesufu, Adeyanju, others humiliate Buhari on social media, demand his resignation

    Nigerian activists, Aisha Yesufu, Deji Adeyanju, among several other concerned Nigerians on Sunday lampooned President Muhammadu Buhari over the appalling security situation of the country.

    Reacting to the killing of no less than 43 farmers by Boko Haram terrorists in a farming community in Borno State, Yesufu said a mannequin has better uses than Buhari.

    On the other side, Deji Adeyanju who condemned the silence on the part of the oppoisitional government amidst several killings, adbuctions in Nigeria posited that President Muhammadu Buhari should either resign or be impeached from office.

    “The number of people abducted on Kaduna road alone is enough to make a president resign or be impeached. Several sources say sometimes over 100 people are abducted on that road and the issues go unreported.” He noted.

    In a series of tweets,Aisha Yesufu said Buhari’s only achievement was to keep Nigerians down.

    She called on all Nigerians to unite and fight so that they do not become the next victims of the President’s incompetence.

    She said, “Human beings like us are being killed. They will kill us too when they are done with them. South or North, no one is spared. Can we stop categorising deaths into South and North? Nigerians are being killed and it is not okay.

    Other reactions from Nigerians:

  • Borno killing: 10 women still missing, says Amnesty

    Borno killing: 10 women still missing, says Amnesty

    Global rights group, Amnesty International, says 10 women working in the Kwashaba rice farm where Boko Haram slaughtered 43 persons, are still missing.

    Amnesty said this in a tweet on Sunday.

    The organisation further stated that 16 out of the 43 farmers that were killed were actually Internally Displaced Persons.

    The tweet read in part, “Boko Haram and other armed groups must renounce their unlawful and vicious campaign of violence against civilians. The Nigerian authorities, for their part, must do more to protect civilians and bring the perpetrators of all such attacks to justice.

    “Amnesty International’s findings show that, of the 43 farmers slaughtered by Boko Haram yesterday, 16 were Internally Displaced Persons resident at Farm Centre IDP Camp while 10 women working in Kwashabe rice farm are still missing after the attack.”

    The bodies of the victims were taken to Zabarmari village, two kilometres away, where they would be kept ahead of burial on Sunday.

  • Killing of 43 farmers: Buhari must rejig security architecture now, says Atiku

    Killing of 43 farmers: Buhari must rejig security architecture now, says Atiku

    Former Vice President, Atiku Abubakar has said the rejig of the nation’s security architecture by President Muhammadu Buhari is long overdue following slaughtering of 43 farmers by Boko Haram in Borno on Saturday.

    The farmers on rice fields at Zabarmari, in Jere Local Government area of Borno were on Saturday slaughtered by the insurgents.

    They were reportedly tied with their throats slit by the wicked insurgents.

    Atiku, in a tweet said the killing of the farmers was heartbreaking, saying words failed him over the dastardly act.

    He lamented that the lives of citizens should be worth more than this.

    “Heartbreaking. Words fail me. The lives of our citizens should be worth much more than this. The rejig of the nation’s security architecture is long overdue.

    “May their souls rest in peace and may their families be comforted,” he said.

    Reacting to the development on Saturday, Buhari said the killing of the farmers by Boko Haram was insane.

    He condemned the killing, saying the entire country is hurt by these senseless killings.Buhari said his government has given the necessary support to the military to protect the country’s population and territory.

    ”I condemn the killing of our hardworking farmers by terrorists in Borno State. The entire country is hurt by these senseless killings.

    “My thoughts are with their families in this time of grief. May their souls Rest In Peace,” he said.

    Boko Haram terrorists had on Saturday slaughtered 43 farm workers near Maiduguri, Borno.

    READ ALSO Troops eliminate 35 terrorists in Borno
    Leader of Anti-jihadist militias told Babakura Kolo AFP on Saturday that the group has recovered 43 bodies, all of them slaughtered, with six others injured.

    “It is no doubt the handiwork of Boko Haram who operate in the area and frequently attack farmers,” he said.

    Also, Reuters, citing a village leader, a local fighter with the Zamarmari group and a police source, also reported the attack, putting the death toll to at least 40 people.

    A search by the authorities for the attackers has been launched, it added.

    The victims were labourers from Sokoto State in northwest Nigeria, roughly 1,000 kilometres (600 miles) away, who had travelled to the northeast to find work, said another militiaman Ibrahim Liman who gave the same toll.

    “There were 60 farmers who were contracted to harvest paddy in the rice fields. Forty-three were slaughtered, with six injured,” Liman told AFP.

    READ ALSO Photo News: Buhari receives briefing on Coronavirus in Abuja
    Eight others were missing, presumed to have been kidnapped by the jihadists, he said.

    The bodies were taken to Zabarmari village, two kilometres away, where they would be kept ahead of burial on Sunday, said resident Mala Bunu who took part in the search and rescue operation.

  • BREAKING: Tension grips Borno as Boko Haram beheads over 40 farmers

    BREAKING: Tension grips Borno as Boko Haram beheads over 40 farmers

    Members of the Boko Haram sect on Saturday killed over 40 farmers in Zamarmari area of Jere local government area of Borno State.

    The barbaric incident which happened on Saturday afternoon led to tension and an uneasy feeling in the town on Saturday evening when the news broke.

    Meanwhile, President Muhammadu Buhari has expressed grief over the killings, describing the act as insane and prayed that the souls of the victims rest in peace.

    Reacting in a statement by his Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Garba Shehu, the President expressed grief over the killing of the farmers on rice fields at Zabarmari, in Jere Local Government of Borno State, describing the terrorist killings as insane.

    The statement was titled, ‘President Buhari Condemns As Insane, Boko Haram Killing Of Farmers in Borno State.’

    The statement quoted Buhari as saying, “I condemn the killing of our hardworking farmers by terrorists in Borno State. The entire country is hurt by these senseless killings. My thoughts are with their families in this time of grief. May their souls Rest In Peace.”

    The statement added that the President had given all the needed support to the armed forces “to take all necessary steps to protect the country’s population and its territory.”

    How the killings happened:

    Nasiru Usman, one farmers who escaped during the attack, went to town with the news. He said the attackers also abducted seven farmers. Usman said trouble started after some farmers apprehended a Boko Haram insurgent who approached them with request for food.

    “Unknowingly, he was accompanied by dozens of other militants who were hiding around the bush. So immediately they tied him and seized his guns, his other colleagues quickly stormed the scene, and opened fire on the farmers, while they took to their heels. At exactly 11am, the group declared a blanket killing against all the farmers harvesting their products.

    “They began by abducting seven, then went on rampage and began killing every one in sight. So far, we have recovered up to 45 bodies. Our civilian JTF, police and Military are still searching for more bodies. We won’t know how many are missing so far for now since more bodies are still being found,” he said.

    Several bullet wounds were seen on the body of the deceased farmers, according to another source who helped in recovering the bodies and immediately prepared for burial.

    Residents have insisted that the state Governor has to see the bodies of the 43 victims, all of whom had their throats slit.

    According to AFP, the victims were mostly labourers from Sokoto state in northwest Nigeria, who were contracted to harvest paddy in the rice fields.

    Zabarmari is known to be within the sphere of influence of Boko Haram parent group, however, it’s splinter Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) faction have previously conducted an attack in the town. The latter group is notorious for targeting farmers cultivating their farmlands.

    The violence in the region has taken a toll of over 30,000 fatalities with about two million people displaced from their homes since 2009.

     

  • Boko Haram: Borno launches 25-year recovery development plan

    Boko Haram: Borno launches 25-year recovery development plan

    The Borno State Government is set to launch 25 years development plan, articulating key priorities and action plan for short, medium and long term development drive across all sectors in the state.

    The event, which is underway at the Multipurpose Hall, Borno State Government House, Maiduguri, is hosted by the State governor, Professor Babagana Umara Zulum.

    The 25-year Borno State Development Plan (BSDP) aims at restoring the age-old honour, dignity, and prosperity of Borno State while ensuring that all citizens and future generations have access to basic necessities and thrive at every stage of their lives.

    The plan will incorporate a 10- year strategic transformation plan, with the objective of reaching a self-reliant Borno State, with over 70% productive population by 2030.

    Dignitaries expected to grace the event include the Honourable Minister of Finance, Budget and National Planning, Hajiya Zainab Ahmed; Group Managing Director, Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, Mallam Mele Kyari; Honourable Minister of Humanitarian Affairs and Social Development; Hon. Sadiya Umar among others

    Details shortly…

  • A Fearsome Urgency in Borno – Chidi Amuta

    A Fearsome Urgency in Borno – Chidi Amuta

    By Chidi Amuta

    In less than 36 hours in the past fortnight, Borno State governor, Babagana Zulum, was the target of two gruesome assassination attempts. In a frightening video that has been circulating on the social media, the firefight between the vicious armed attackers in ambush and the governor’s security personnel was so intense and obviously came as lightning surprise that the vehicles in the convoy became shields of armour for security guards and the VIPs in the entourage. A figure of a helpless man crawling for safety underneath one of the vehicles is rumored to be the governor himself in a desperate crawl for dear life. In this age of truthful lies and alternate facts, I have no way of ascertaining the veracity of this.

    A concerted military operation targeted at the convoy of a sitting governor with the obvious objective of taking him out or down is a poster indicator of abysmal insecurity. If a governor with all the visible indicators of state security and maximal coercion can be so insecure, why would ordinary folk not be mortally afraid. That these attacks took place in a state that is practically a theatre of active military operation provides an obvious suspect: Boko Haram. The specific location is Borno state but the target is clearly the entire country now caught in the throes of spiraling insecurity.

    The attacks on governor Zulum are first and foremost assassination attempts. Mr. Zulum is primarily the political leader of Borno State, a sub sovereign territory that is being actively contested by a rival armed force. In that context, the location makes Zulum a legitimate military target. But because the man is primarily a politician, the field of suspicion in these attacks must sweep beyond the purely military context of Boko Haram. The urge to explore conspiracy scenarios is heightened by the fact that Zulum alone has probably experienced the highest number of ambush assassination attempts in the over a decade of Boko Haram during which governors have been coming and going. Mr. Zulum is on record as having excoriated both the military and the federal authorities for the inefficiencies in the anti insurgency operations in his state. The questions, therefore, remain: Who wants Zulum dead and why?

    Since his election, Governor Zulum has functioned more or less like a war time governor. In this regard, he has shown exemplary leadership in terms of his commitment to the relief and resettlement of the many citizens of the state displaced by the Boko Haram insurgency. Remarkably, he has not allowed the obvious dangers of governing a state that is largely a war zone to deter him. On repeated occasions, he has shown open reservations about the conduct of soldiers on security duties in civilian centres of the state. On one occasion, he took open exception to soldiers extorting motorists at a major highway checkpoint. Such encounters may not have earned him too many friends in sensitive places. But the governor seems self assured in his moral posture. It is significant that the recent ambushes on his convoys took place on his way from an IDP resettlement event.

    From the perspective of the Boko Haram insurgency, the governor of Borno state, the key operational theatre, would be a prize target for political and strategic reasons. It will register the terrorists as effective and active contestants for political control of a big slice of Nigeria’s sovereign space. If they can take the governor out, it will convince their followership that their dream of a caliphate around the Lake Chad basin is indeed feasible.

    Secondly, a successful strike on Zulum will put a lie to the bogus and consistent bluff of the Nigerian state and its security apparatus that the anti-Boko Haram war is practically over. An insurgent force that has been defeated does not launch such daring operations in rapid succession even as a roving guerilla movement. Nor would a dying terror group be so bold as to choose a high value target that could expose them to great harm.

    There has been enough recent activity in that theatre to reaffirm that Boko Haram is still very much alive and well. In the last one month, Boko Haram ambushes have claimed the lives of many soldiers including the brilliant force commander, Colonel Dahiru Bako. Obviously, between the propaganda of the authorities and the actual situation on the ground, there would seem to be a disconnect which could endanger the lives of the unsuspecting.

    At the level of basic security and VIP protection, the movement of a state governor is not exactly a silent or sudden affair. Even at short notice, it would be planned and in such a hostile environment, the security detailing and route scoping would be known by the experts. Such planning would be conducted in close collaboration with relevant military authorities in charge of the theatre. The fact that on both occasions, the ambushes precisely targeted the governor’s convoy at weak points on those routes should help investigators determine where the intelligence leakage in the governor’s security cover lies. In this age of cell phones and all manner of electronic positioning devices and tools for surveillance, detection and exchange of information among devious collaborators should be predictable.

    We live in a country that has fast degenerated into a free laboratory for all forms of violent excursions. Systemic instability has fed casual violent escapades by non -state actors. These days, there is no shortage of freelance gunmen, militants, bandits and assorted transactional trouble makers for rent on the cheap.

    In such a Hobbesian terrain, laying ambushes for the convoys of governors and other VIPS could graduate into a macabre fad, a veritable paradigm for imitation among the diverse armed factions roaming our national space. In the countdown to another “do-or-die’’ general election in 2023, military style ambushes for top political contestants could become an attractive business proposition for contract bandits.

    The more frightening dimension of the Borno crisis is the reality that the insurgency may have become part of the partisan fray in Borno state. Boko Haram has been around for quite a while.
    It could not possibly be insulated from the politics of the state. People are mindful of the fact that it was a disagreement between the late Mohammed Yusuf, founder of Boko Haram, and the then state governor Ali Modu Sheriff that sparked off the insurgency. There seemed to be an understanding then that Mr. Yusuf was free to propagate his sect and canvass his theology without disturbing the peace or challenging the state. Trouble apparently started when the cleric trespassed into political territory by weaponizing his followership against the governor and his politics. He was beginning to steer his movement in the direction of Hamas and Hezbollah, competing with government for the hearts and minds of the people by providing copeting social services. The governor ordered Yusuf’s arrest and detention. He later died in police custody under questionable circumstances, a development that sparked off anger among his followers. They later took to Sambisa and other forests never to return in peace. From there they launched Boko Haram, as a jihadist movement with clear anti-Western and anti government agenda. The rest is history.

    The possibility that the Nigerian tradition of armed politics could now find Boko Haram a ready source of armed thugs and a ready fighting force is clear and present. Any political faction supported by Boko Haram in Borno politics can be assured of a ready supply of armed thugs.

    Given this background, we cannot discountenance the political implications and connectedness of the military security situation and the contest for political pre-eminence in Borno state. It becomes impossible also to disconnect the Boko Haram insurgency from a nasty political tradition in the state which has pitted fundamentalist sectarians against the secular state.

    Across the rest of Nigeria, there is now an abiding fear that the Boko Haram insurgency and the war against it have become a veritable source of small arms and unofficial weapons training for criminals disturbing the peace around the country. No one knows how much of this information has been scientifically verified and documented by our security establishment. What is undeniable however is that the Boko Haram war has lasted this long because it has since become a major revenue and expenditure sub -head in our national budget. Naturally, wherever there is consistent government revenue and expenditure, business opportunities emerge, an industry germinates, vested interests organize and sooner than later, an industry is in place. In other words, there is presently an active conspiracy theory that some vested interests are in no hurry for Nigeria to exit the war. People point to the fact that while it took the Nigerian military a mere two and half years to end the Nigerian civil war, the Boko Haram war has lingered for over a decade. Yet, we have more advancements in training and weaponry plus, overwhelming international support based on the acknowledgment that Boko Haram is an active part of the global terror network. Most intelligence estimates have projected that the Boko Haram insurgency ought to have ended in less than five years. But it has lingered as both political foot ball and an ‘industry’ in its own right.

    Nigeria’s Defence Headquarters has in the course of this campaign acquired formidable PR and political communication savvy and clout. It insists that this is no symmetric waefare. It is an unconventional war, being fought against an unconventional enemy with training and support from hardened terrorist movements outside across international borders in a globalised information age.

    It is of course in the interest of our defence and security establishment to continue assuring the political leadership in Abuja that Boko Haram has been ‘liquidated’, ‘practically defeated’, ‘neutralized’ or ‘substantially degraded’. Just words and empty phrases. But of course Mr. Shekau, the leader of the terrorists movement, has in the process acquired more than the proverbial nine lives. He has been variously ‘killed’ over and over and has become the only Nigerian villain known to have died and resurrected so many times! Perhaps Mr. Shekau’s ‘immortality’ is the boldest indication of the altered face of Nigeria’s military prowess.

    Here then lies the ultimate significance of the travails of Governor Zulum. These harrowing experiences are perhaps the next level in the descent of our nation into hopeless insecurity and foreseeable anarchy. The Zulum attacks are in some ways a metaphor for the current state of internal security in the nation. Today it is Borno state and its governor. No one knows for whom next the bleak bell will toll. This is the reality of vicious insurgency. It is the face of a direct affront on authority, officialdom and sovereignty. Above all, it is a stark daily reminder that Nigerians are now in a place where the safety of citizens can no longer be taken for granted.

  • Police list names of officers killed in Borno govt’s convoy

    Police list names of officers killed in Borno govt’s convoy

    The Borno State Police Command have released the names of the officers killed by Boko Haram ambush on Saturday.

    Commissioner of Police, Bello Makwashi listed the names of his dead personnel on Monday when Borno Governor, Babagana Zulum visited the Command Headquarters in Maiduguri, the state capital.

    “During the encounter, I want to name the names of those that lost their lives and paid the supreme price,” Makwashi said.

    According to him, the affected officers are Mba Mathew, Ibrahim Muhammad, David Jarta, Jerry Joseph, John Barka, Elijah Gwarza, Eheboya Osaheinde, and Nura Aminu.

    The police boss told the governor that the State Command had to break the sad news to the families of those in Maiduguri, adding that some were still on their way coming.

    Meanwhile, the wives of the slain officers have appealed to the governor for support during the trying moment.

    Mrs Effa David Jarta who spoke on behalf of the widows said they received the news of the unfortunate incident that claimed the lives of their breadwinners in utter shock, adding that “it is not easy.”

    “It is God’s design for them, everybody will die but our prayer is to consider us. Let the government see us and pay all the benefits of our husbands. This is all I have to tell you.”

    Mrs Joseph thanked the governor for his visit but said “consider us and the situation we are in.”

    On his part, Governor Zulum expressed deep regret about the incident which he said was the first in 18 months since he became governor.

    He however assured the women of his commitment to support their livelihood efforts and the education of their children.

    “I am standing before you here, I am not here to just see you and go back. God willing we shall not let you down, we shall support you.” Zulum assured.

    This comes three days after Boko Haram ambushed the convoy of the state government.

    The convoy ran into an ambush by Boko Haram at a spot called Korochara, which is about 2km away from the base of the Multi-National Joint Task Force on the way to Baga from Monguno.