Boko Haram fighters,
fleeing an attack on their base last week might have used some of the Chibok
schoolgirls kidnapped on April 14, 2014, as human shields to prevent
being
fired upon by fighter jets during the attack on Sambisa Forest.
The Theatre
Commander of the military campaign, Operation Lafiya Dole, Maj. Gen. Lucky
Irabor, on Wednesday, showed journalists aerial footage he said was filmed
during attack on Sambisa Forest that showed the terrorists moving with women
and children.
“The haggard
fighters were just using them as a shield,” Irabor said at a news conference in
Maiduguri.
Irabor added, “That
is why we did not engage them from the air. We had always believed and hoped
that going into the Sambisa Forest would afford us the opportunity to get the
remaining Chibok girls. What we can’t tell is whether those women we can see
were the Chibok girls.”
The terrorists had
kidnapped more than 200 girls from the Government Secondary School, Chibok,
Borno State, on April 14, 2014.
President Muhammadu
Buhari said on Saturday that the terrorists’ last enclave in the forest had
been captured.
Irabor said the
military was pursuing those who fled, adding that 1,240 people, suspected to be
militants, their relatives or sympathisers, had been arrested in the past one
week.
Meanwhile, the
Nasrul-Lahi-L-Fatih Society has hailed the military for the recapture of the
Sambisa Forest from Boko Haram, urging the military to sustain the war against
the sect.
The group, in a
statement by its President, Kameel Bolarinwa, asked the Federal Government to
ensure improved welfare for the military personnel to boost their morale.
The statement added,
“The fall of Sambisa Forest in the hands of our soldiers inevitably signposts a
great landmark in the fight against terrorism in this country.
“Kudos must also be
given to the administration of President Muhammadu Buhari for boosting the
morale of the Army in terms of provision of the military equipment and adequate
welfare, which assisted the Army to re-engineer its operations and strategies.
“The Army must be
adequately funded such that no soldier, who is risking his life for peace and
unity of our nation, is made to suffer any deprivation, hardship or denial of
his entitlement.”
NASFAT, however,
warned the military against complacency, adding that concerted efforts must be
made to consolidate on the achievement.
“It is against this
backdrop that we are gladdened by the decision of the leadership of the
Nigerian Army to turn the forest to a training ground for the force,” the
statement said.
Punch
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