[NEWS] 48 Bodies of Chad Basin Oil Explorers Recovered After B’Haram Ambush
Osinbajo meets security chiefs
Shettima condemns attack
Shettima condemns attack
Northern Leaders express worries over insecuritya
Military blame weather for resurgence of terrorism
Military blame weather for resurgence of terrorism
Omololu Ogunmade, Chineme Okafor, Paul Obi, Olawale Ajimtokan in Abuja and Michael Olugbode in Maiduguri
The extent of the fatality recorded
during last Tuesday’s ambush of oil exploration workers in the Lake Chad
Basin by the terrorist group, Boko Haram, emerged Thursday as THISDAY
sources said 48 bodies of the victims of the attack were deposited at
the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital (UMTH) mortuary.
The information came just as Acting
President Yemi Osinbajo met with service chiefs Thursday in Abuja over
the resurgence of terrorist attacks in the country and ordered them to
relocate to Maiduguri, the epicentre of the Boko Haram terror.
Moved by the recent carnage, the
Governor of Borno State, Alhaji Kashim Shettima, commiserated with the
families of the victims and expressed his regrets that the attack had
set back the progress being made in the war against terror.
According to THISDAY sources, the
details of the corpses deposited at the UMTH showed that 18 soldiers
were lost, 15 Civilian JTF members killed alongside five university
staff and four NNPC drivers.
It was also gathered that the bodies of
six persons who were wounded in the attack but escaped to somewhere in
Yobe State where they were later found dead had been brought to
Maiduguri.
Apart from the wounded soldiers admitted
to the military hospital in the town, two members of the Civilian JTF
were also on admission at the UMTH Thursday.
The Nigerian Army in a statement on
Wednesday by its spokesman, Brig. Gen. Sani Usman, had claimed that all
the NNPC staff abducted in the Tuesday ambush had been rescued.
Usman had said: “On receipt of the
information, the Brigade mobilised and sent reinforcement, search and
rescue party that include the Armed Forces Special Forces and guides
that worked and pursued the terrorists throughout the night.
“So far, they have rescued all the NNPC
staff and recovered the corpses of the officer, 8 soldiers and a
civilian, who have been evacuated to 7 Division Medical Services and
Hospital.
“The team recovered 4 vehicles one of
which included a gun truck mounted with an Anti-Aircraft Gun, 2 white
Hilux taken away from NNPC staff and 1 blue Hilux belonging to CJTF. The
team also recovered large quantities of arms and ammunition; several
spare tyres; many jerry cans, containing Petrol; Oil and Lubricant;
assorted drugs; Improvised Explosive Device (IED) making materials;
reflective jackets and a Motorola handheld radio, among others. The team
also neutralized many of the terrorists.”
But investigations by THISDAY revealed
that five lecturers from the University of Maiduguri (UNIMAID) in the
exploration team were killed. They included Dr. Joseph Millitus, Dr.
Manaja Uba and Idris Njodi. The names of the other two were yet to be
revealed.
A member of Millitus’ family, Daniel
Millitus, told THISDAY that the family was still in grief over the loss
of one of their rising stars.
Daniel, who is a pastor in one of the
parishes of the Redeemed Christian Church of God in Maiduguri, said the
family was making arrangements for the burial of their son.
A female relative of the Ubas, said the family was still in shock and found it difficult to believe that “Manaja was no more.”
She lamented that another relative (Yusuf Ibrahim) also in the exploration team was still missing.
When contacted on phone by journalists,
the spokesman of University of Maiduguri, Professor Danjuma Gambo, said
he was not in the university at the moment and had limited access to
information on the situation in the institution.
He, however, promised to get more information on the claims as soon as he gets back to the campus from Abuja.
The Deputy Director, Army Public
Relations, Col. Kingsley Samuel, when contacted on the matter said it
was not within the purview of the 7 Division where he was the spokesman.
Osinbajo Relocates Service Chiefs to Maiduguri
Following renewed deadly Boko Haram
attacks in the North-east, Osinbajo Thursday summoned service chiefs to
an emergency meeting in the State House, Abuja.
The acting president, who had been on a
trip to Port Harcourt to inaugurate a fertiliser plant, returned to the
Presidential Villa in the evening to preside over the meeting.
It was subsequently resolved that
service chiefs should return to the command centre to witness the turn
of events for themselves.
Upon taking the oath of office on May
29, 2015, President Muhammadu Buhari had ordered the relocation of the
Command and Control Centre to the war-torn North-east to enable them
oversee the battle against terror effectively.
But there had been protracted attacks from insurgents particularly on the University of Maiduguri (UNIMAID) in recent times, resulting in the destruction of several lives and property.
The latest of the attacks was the
killing of 18 soldiers and abduction of 10 members of staff of the
Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) who were on oil
exploration mission.
Although there were reported claims by
the military that the oil workers had been rescued, the Minister of
State for Petroleum, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, said no contact had been
established with them.
Answering questions from journalists
after the meeting Thursday, the Minister of Defence, Col. Mansur Dan-Ali
(rtd.), said the meeting resolved that the service chiefs should return
to the command centre and examine the situation.
He also said they resolved to install
more surveillance devices and cameras to enable them monitor the
insurgents from a distance.
According to him, this raining season
has complicated military operations in the region, making it difficult
for troops to be on top of the situation.
However, he said they were putting the
machinery in motion to regain mastery of the terrain and dismantle the
deadly ambushes built by the insurgents.
Dan-Ali said: “We just finished a
meeting with the acting president and the three service chiefs. We
agreed that they should move back to the Command Centre again and see
what are the things happening there.
“We have also agreed that we should get
more surveillance devices, cameras that will be able to see distant
attackers coming to the position of our troops.
“So also, the period of the raining
season is a difficult moment for us. We cannot dominate the environment
like what we did during the dry season but effort is geared towards
regaining back our areas and we assure you that all these ambushes that
are happening regularly would be stopped.”
Present at the meeting were the Chief of
Defence Staff, Gen. Gabriel Olonisakin; Chief of Army Staff, Lt-Gen
Tukur Buratai; Chief of Naval Staff, Vice Admiral Abak Ibas; Chief of
Air Staff, Air Vice Marshall Abubakar Saddique and Dan-Ali.
Meanwhile, the Minister of State for
Petroleum Resources, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, on Thursday disclosed that the
Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) was sufficiently cleared
by the country’s military to resume oil search in the Chad Basin which
passes through Bornu State, a hotbed of terrorist group, Boko Haram.
Kachikwu also stated that while NNPC
recognised the risks of going to search for oil in the region as
directed by Buhari, to grow Nigeria’s reserves, it sought and waited for
the military to clear it in 2016 to undertake the tasks.
He, however, said unless sufficient
clearance was again obtained from the military, NNPC would not resume
its oil search in the region soon.
Buoyed by the commercial oil finds in
neighbouring Chad Republic, NNPC on the orders of Buhari intensified and
focused its exploratory work in the Inland Basins on the Chad Basin and
Benue Trough areas.
In November 2016, it resumed exploration activities in Gubio, Magumeri,
Monguno, Kukawa, Abadam, Guzamala and Mobar, after getting security
advice from the military.
However, on July 25, 2017, the NNPC
Frontier Exploration Services (FES) and Surface Geochemistry Sampling
crew comprising of three consultants attached to FES and the Integrated
Data Services Limited (IDSL); nine external consultants from the
University of Maiduguri; military personnel and members of the Civilian
Joint Task Force (JTF) were ambushed by Boko Haram, while returning to
Maiduguri town after conducting survey mapping and geological study.
Nine soldiers and some members of the civilian JTF were reportedly
killed.
But speaking to journalists in Abuja on
the development, Kachikwu noted that NNPC was yet to officially confirm
reports that the military had rescued its workers that were abducted by
Boko Haram, though army spokesman, Sani Usman, said all of NNPC’s
workers have been rescued and corpses of the nine dead soldiers and
civilian JTF retrieved.
Kachikwu, also said NNPC would wait on
the military to determine its next move, adding that government would
take care of the families of the dead security personnel.
“I would ordinarily have opted against
answering that for the simple reason that it is not respectful to the
souls of those who died to be discussing going back or not, but for
specifics, the reality is that anytime NNPC decides to go into a
terrain, they first get the privilege of security advice and that
security advice I can say was sufficiently cleared,” said Kachikwu.
Asked why the corporation went into Boko
Haram’s hotbed to explore for oil notwithstanding the security
clearance, Kachikwu said: “I have explained we got security clearance,
and by the way, across the other side of Lake Chad, our neighbours are
busy drilling, we are really not alone in this.”
Military Explains Resurgence of Terror
In a new report released by the Air
Component of the Operation Lafiya Dole, the military said bad weather
and the use of foliage and dense vegetation were giving Boko Haram the
leverage to maximise their attacks in recent times.
Recently, the terrorists had stepped up their game, targeting the UNIMAID.
But in a report by the Nigerian Air
Force (NAF) spearheading the air component of the war against Boko Haram
insurgency, bad weather and new strategies adopted by the terrorists
seemed to have derailed the operations of the military in averting some
of the recent attacks.
The report presented by Air Commodore
Tajudeen Yusuf said the most daunting challenge confronting troops
“indicated a gradual return of Boko Haram terrorist activities into the
Sambisa Forest”.
“In view of the prevailing weather and
the associated environmental impediments, operations by the ground
troops have not continued at a desirable pace,” he said.
In his reaction, the Borno State
Governor, Shettima, described the attack on oil exploration workers at
the Lake Chad Basin by Boko Haram as a tragic setback in the fight
against terrorism in the North-east and efforts to boost the nation’s
economy.
The governor, in a statement by his
spokesman, Mallam Isa Gusau, e-mailed to THISDAY, said he was still in
shock and had not fully recovered after hearing of the tragic attack.
The governor, who said the news was
broken to him while on his journey to the United Kingdom alongside some
governors to visit ailing President Muhammadu Buhari, said: “I haven’t
been my normal self since I received information on that attack. What
happened in the first instance was a tragic setback in the fight against
Boko Haram and in Nigeria’s effort to expand its economic fortunes.
“I am deeply pained by this incident
especially coming at a time when we were beginning to pick up the pieces
of our lives. Even though the attack should never have happened given
the successes recorded by the military and multi-national joint forces
since 2015, I nonetheless still deem it necessary to commend the
military for re-mobilising and countering the initial gains of the
insurgents.”
Northern Leaders Raise the Alarm over Growing Insecurity, Conflicts
Highly placed religious and political
figures from the North, led by Sultan of Sokoto Sa’ad Abubakar II, have
expressed concern over the growing instability, surge in kidnapping,
Biafran separatist agitation and economic inequality among others that
are sweeping across the country.
The elders under the aegis of the Senior
Working Group warned that the developments are disturbing signs of
fragility within the security apparatus of the country.
They also warned that it could have dire consequences for the unity of the country if not addressed.
They expressed their concern in a statement issued last night titled: For the Wellbeing of Nigerians.
Other individuals in the group of 11 include, Cardinal John Onaiyekan, General Martin Luther Agwai (rt.), Ambassador Fatima Balla, Dr. Usman Bugaje, Ambassador Ibrahim Gambari, Dr. Nguyan Feese, Dr. Jibrin Ibrahim, Mrs. Aisha Murtala Muhammed Oyebode and Dr. Chris Kwaja.
Other individuals in the group of 11 include, Cardinal John Onaiyekan, General Martin Luther Agwai (rt.), Ambassador Fatima Balla, Dr. Usman Bugaje, Ambassador Ibrahim Gambari, Dr. Nguyan Feese, Dr. Jibrin Ibrahim, Mrs. Aisha Murtala Muhammed Oyebode and Dr. Chris Kwaja.
They said the current state of the
nation is tantamount to a hotbed of internal conflicts that threaten its
sovereignty and legitimacy as a nation-state.
They listed the Biafran agitations in
the South-east, rising communal violence across the country, the Boko
Haram crisis raging in the North-east, and the surge in armed robbery
and kidnappings as tell tale signs of insecurity.
“The drivers of these varying conflicts differ in nature, but find their
remedy in the constitutional responsibility of the state i.e. the
protection of lives and property, provision of education; in short,
creating an enabling environment that safeguards the flourishing of
citizens and those within its borders,” the statement said.
The Senior Working Group said
instability is stumping the country’s potential for prosperity, while
adding that the tremendous human and entrepreneurial strengths of
Nigerians are yet to be fully realised.
They also noted the demonstrated weaknesses of the state to offer
genuine responce to these sources
of instability that perpetuate a cycle
of reoccurring violent conflicts in communities across the country,
particularly in northern Nigeria.
They also painted an abject outlook about the fragility and restiveness in the North, particularly the North-east.
According to them, the region, in terms of the measure of its human
development, hovers around issues such as, high illiteracy, high
unemployment rates, and above all, the highest levels of inequality and
poverty.
“Although inequality persists across
Nigeria; it presents a significant challenge in the north because this
region contains 19 of Nigeria’s 36 states, occupies almost 70 percent of
the landmass of the country, and is home to different ethnic and
religious communities.
“This growing gap between the rich and
poor, beyond poverty itself, generates anti-government sentiments that
are easily manipulated to fuel civil unrest, and drive wedges between
communities that have coexisted in the region for decades.
“This, of course indicates the lapses of
the government over time in living up to its responsibilities, which
has opened the floodgates for those challenging the legitimacy of the
state to offer their own alternatives on how to ‘save the people’.
“The underlining narrative of Boko Haram
is the offer of an alternative state that not only postulates to be
theologically legitimate, but also seeks out the forgotten welfare of
the people,” the statement said.
The opinion leaders stressed that cascading problems facing the North is a genetic feature across all the 19 states.
However, they noted that the common
problem provides an opportunity for common solutions that re-imagine
inter-state cooperation and collaboration that identify failing public
goods in order to provide joint solutions and offer the people greater
alternatives to competing narratives.
The group proposed a collaborative efforts by the North, saying the entire block must work together to solve its common problems for the greater good of Nigeria.
The group proposed a collaborative efforts by the North, saying the entire block must work together to solve its common problems for the greater good of Nigeria.
In addition, they appealed for
corporation among Northern state governors leading to deliberation on
common policies that address common setbacks.
“Joint ventures should be encouraged and
already existing organisations, networks and institution, such as the
Arewa Research and Development Project (ARDP) and the New Nigeria
Development Company (NNDC), owned by the 19 northern states with the
mission to promote socio-economic transformation, should be welcomed,
reinvigorated and strengthened because they seek to foster solutions for
the wellbeing of all Nigerians,” they pointed out.
They called on the governors to
institutionalise early warning mechanisms in collaboration with civic
actors and community-based organisations that can flag potential
conflicts, saying these organisations can adequately inform government
so they can prepare to respond, and in some cases, prevent conflicts.
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