President Buhari orders’s IGP to relocate to state
• Three soldiers, 107 B’Haram fighters die in clashes
Herdsmen on Monday stormed a police camp at Awashuwa village in Logo
Local Government Area (LGA) of Benue State, killing two personnel.
Sources disclosed that the assailants had struck the base earlier in the
day but were repelled. They, however, regrouped in the evening and staged the
fatal attack.
A policeman who survived the incident said the herdsmen swooped on the
camp in large numbers, overpowering the officers. The inspector and a sergeant
who were wounded later had their throats slit. The attackers also burnt some
houses.
Another policeman who was seriously injured was stabilised at Anyii
General Hospital before he was moved to the Benue State University Teaching
Hospital (BSUTH) in Makurdi.
The remains of the deceased policemen have been deposited at the mortuary
in Makurdi.
The Deputy Commissioner of Police, Abdul Gimba, during an aerial
surveillance operation, was said to have made a stopover at Awashuwa while the
corpses were being evacuated.
“Our men came under attack at Awashuwa. They were ambushed by herdsmen
who had tried to attack them earlier in the day but were repelled. Two of our
men were killed and their rifles taken away,” a police spokesman confirmed,
adding that a reinforcement from 13 Police Mobile Force had been sent to the
area, led by Chief Superintendent Abubakar Gimba.
Meanwhile, President Muhammadu Buhari has ordered Inspector General of
Police (IGP) Ibrahim Idris to relocate to the state.
On Monday, Buhari ordered the police boss to relocate immediately, with a
mandate to “restore law and order, prevent further loss of life and forestall
the crisis from escalating.”
A statement by police spokesman, Chief Superintendent Jimoh Moshood,
reads: “In compliance with the presidential directive, the IGP is moving into
Benue State with additional five units of Police Mobile Force (PMF), making a
total of 10 units deployed in the state, in addition to other police formations
on ground in the state before the crisis.”
It notes: “Following the recent unfortunate killings of innocent people
in Guma and Logo LGAs and the intervention and ongoing efforts by the Nigeria
Police Force to restore peace in the state, the President and Commander in
Chief of the Armed Forces, Muhammadu Buhari, has ordered that the Inspector
General of Police move immediately to the state.”
According to the police, “More units of special forces, counter-terrorism
units and conventional policemen are already being deployed,” in compliance
with the order.
“Aerial surveillance by police helicopters will continue, while the
mobile force personnel, special forces and conventional personnel, the
counter-terrorism unit, explosive ordinance department and special joint
intelligence and investigation teams already deployed will carry on
unrelentingly with the patrols and crime prevention activities in the affected
areas, to sustain the normalcy that has been restored.”
The police force stressed it would “not hesitate to deal decisively with
trouble makers, groups or individuals likely to escalate the crisis.”
In a statement, yesterday, the Trade Union Congress (TUC) called on the
Federal Government to bring perpetrators of the Benue killings to book.
“We condemn these killings in all their entirety and demand an end to
them immediately,” said President Bobboi Bala Kaigama and Secretary-General,
Musa-Lawal Ozigi.
Also, three soldiers died on Monday and nine others sustained injuries.
More than 107 militants were also gunned down and various arms and ammunition
recovered.
The Director, Army Public Relations, Brig. Gen. Sani Usman, made the
disclosure in Abuja, yesterday, while giving an update on success in Metele
village, Tumbun Gini and Tumbun Ndjamena.
“Troops in Operation Lafiya Dole have been making tremendous progress in
the ongoing Operation Deep Punch 2,” Usman said. “Sadly, four of our troops
paid the supreme price while nine others were wounded in action. Specifically,
a Boko Haram vehicle laden with Improvised Explosive Devices rammed into an
MRAP vehicle, which exploded, killing three soldiers, a civilian JTF, and
wounding other soldiers.”
He added: “Troops also captured one anti-aircraft gun, 116 rounds of
12.7mm ammunition with metal links, four Ak-47 rifles, 57 rounds of 7.62mm
ammunition (special), two light machine guns, two rocket propelled grenades,
seven RPG tubes, one RPG bomb and 36 hand grenades.”
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