Country Has
Capacity To Fight B’Haram, Other Criminalities, Says DHQ
• NAF
Deploys Additional Forces And Equipment To North East
• Army
Refuses To React To Video Of Abduction Of UNIMAID Lecturers By Boko Haram
• 14 Killed
In Dikwa, Borno State, Bomb Blast
On at least
four occasions in the past, the Nigerian military has repeatedly claimed it had
killed the leader of the dreaded Boko Haram sect, Abubakar Shekau. But the
military high command last week did a remarkable volte-face and ordered its men
to capture the lethal killer within 40 days, dead or alive.
It is the
same way that the Army’s claim of winning the war against the insurgents is
appearing to be pyrrhic victory afterall, especially with the barrage of
attacks, kidnappings as well as the rising loss of lives of military personnel
and civilians in recent times.
The
resurgence of the terrorist group, despite President Muhammadu Buhari
announcing its “final crushing” in December 2016, also finds vent in last
Tuesday’s capture of academics from the University of Maiduguri, and officials
of the Nigeria National Petroleum Commission (NNPC), who were on an oil
exploration exercise in Lake Chad basin.
A day after
the attack, the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), University of
Maiduguri (UNIMAID) Chapter, said five staff of the school were killed by the
insurgents, just as four are still missing.
Chairman of
the association, Dr. Danny Mamman, told newsmen in Maiduguri that the team
attacked by the insurgents consisted of geologists, staff of NNPC, members of
Civilian Joint Task Force (CJTF) and military personnel.
The Nigerian
Army, on its part, in a statement on Wednesday, by Director, Army Public
Relations, Brig Gen Sani Kukasheka Usman, said it had rescued all the
victims.It said that nine soldiers and five staff of the university were killed
in the attack, adding that soldiers had recovered all the corpses in the rescue
operation.
The Nigerian
Air Force (NAF), Friday, in a tacit confirmation of Boko Haram’s resurgence
revealed that the terrorists were back to the Sambisa Forest area of Borno
State. It also said that its fighter jets and attack helicopters had bombed the
terrorists’ hideouts 108 times between April and July this year.
Air Component
Commander of Operation Lafiya Dole, Air Commodore Tajudeen Yusuf, while
briefing newsmen in Yola, Adamawa State said: “Intelligence surveillance and
Reconnaissance reports through the second quarter of 2017 indicated a gradual
return of the Boko Haram terrorist activities to the Sambisa Forest.
Meanwhile,
the Defence Headquarters (DHQ) yesterday insisted that the country has capacity
to sustainably wage a war against the insurgents in the North East, and other
criminalities nationwide.
Director of
Defence Information (DDI), Maj. Gen John Enenche, told The Guardian that the
fight against all shades of criminalities was not all about money alone, but
using all the kinetics and non-kinetic approaches to win the war, stressing
that one can have all the money without emerging victorious in the war.
He said: “We
have enough, but it is to win every aspect of this war, every aspect of this
conflict that we are going to do, and that is what the country is doing, it is
a multi-sectoral approach we are taking.”
Insisting
that the country has enough resources to rout the terrorists, but was only
being careful in order not to escalate the collateral damage, Enenche added:
“In the North East, the Armed Forces are not like the Boko Haram terrorists
that will kill anything that has life anywhere they bomb. If it was that, the
war would have been won long ago, but there are human beings there, innocent
civilians who say this is our country; this is our state, and this is our zone,
we would still be here.
“So, it is
not the arsenal that you amass that matters, using it appropriately is what
matters. For sure we are going to use it appropriately, and we have the
resources and the political will and we are being provided with what we need.
“I will say
that for me as a military strategist yes, the country is financially able to
support the military to carry out the task ahead of us in the area of curbing
all the insecurity all over the country.”
He appealed
to the general public to give information to the military on any strange
movement of persons or machinery within their environment, maintaining that,
“there is hope that with the sacrifice of our men and resources, the situation
would only continue to improve around the Sambisa area and the entire North East.”
In an
apparent response to the resurgence of terrorists in the North East and general
area around the Sambisa Forest, the NAF, in a statement in Abuja, yesterday,
said it has introduced additional measures aimed at increasing its operational
capability in the ongoing counterinsurgency operations.The measures include,
the deployment of additional NAF Special Forces and personnel of the Regiment
Specialty to reinforce base security, and also fight alongside the Nigerian
Army troops and NAF Special Forces that are already on ground.
The
statement by Director of Information and Public Relations, Air Commodore
Olatokunbo Adesanya, added that, “the NAF has deployed thermal imaging cameras
aimed at adding more value to the current efforts at detecting and checkmating
the activities of suicide bombers before they carry out their suicide
missions.”
The thermal
imaging camera uses infrared and reads temperature differences up to an
appreciable distance away and has the capacity to identify a person at an
acceptable distance.
The cameras,
which are mounted on NAF aircrafts, can also penetrate obscurants such as
smoke, fog and haze, and immensely help the service in its Intelligence,
Surveillance and Reconnaissance (ISR) missions, and interdiction missions on
identified BHT targets. Chief of Air Staff, Air Marshal Sadique Abubakar, in an
exclusive interview with The Guardian, last Sunday, revealed that the service
required more men and materials to help it police every inch of the 60, 000sq
kilometers Sambisa Forest.
“Sambisa
Forest is still substantially under the control of our forces and we fly over
it day and night. Sometimes, for some of these pilots, as we are going to
sleep, that is when they are getting airborne. They take off at 11pm and land
at 5am. All they want is to make sure that Nigeria is safe. Remember that the
forest itself is about 60, 000sq kilometres, and you can’t be on every inch of
it, but where the Boko Haram insurgents had their headquarters at Camp Zero has
been dismantled. Do we have all the forces to capture every inch of the land
within that 60,000sq km? That is the question we should be asking,” Abubakar
said.
Meanwhile,
the Nigerian Army is yet to react to the abduction of three of the four missing
staff of UNIMAID, who were abducted by a faction of the Boko Haram terrorists
led by Khalifa Albarnawi.In a trending three minutes 30 second video, the three
lecturers were shown sitting in a room in which the walls were covered with
fabric, and calling on the Federal Government to negotiate their release.
Efforts by
The Guardian to contact spokesman of the Nigerian Army, Brig. Gen Sani Usman,
on phone did not yield fruits, as calls to his cell phone were not answered.
Even text messages sent to him were also not replied.
In the
video, the three abducted lecturers urged the Nigeria government and all other
relevant authorities linked with the service they were providing before they
were abducted to comply with the demands of their abductors and ensure they are
released alive.
In a related
development, a female suicide bomber on Friday night killed 14 people and
injured 24 others in an attack believed to be targeted at internally displaced
persons in Dikwa, Borno State.
The Borno
State Emergency Management Agency said it evacuated 14 corpses and 24 injured
people from the scene of the attack.It was gathered that the suicide bomber
infiltrated a housing estate in Dikwa accommodating returning Internally
Displaced Persons and denotated explosives.According to the Head of the Rapid
Response Team of the State Emergency Management Agency, Bello Dambatta, a
female suicide bomber sneaked into a building close to the estate around 8:30
pm and detonated the explosives strapped to her.
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