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Toluwarni:i dont care about the wives and children of terrorist. They die they die who cares? Its all about 2015 election. The continuation of this insecurity in the north would have given GEj smooth win |
GEJ is not a good strategist.he wil never get northern votes come 2015. He would hav focus on middle belt, south east, south south and south. Then he should have kept the North under military occupation until 2015, hence destroying their voting power. Thousands wil flee. 3 Likes |
i'm not in support of this one. Its untimely, dont succumb an inch to terrorist. They wil never vote for you 2 Likes |
The United States gave some $3 million in law enforcement assistance to Nigeria last year, meets regularly with Nigerian officers on counterterrorism issues, and considers Nigeria a significant ally in the fight against Islamist extremism. But reports of civilian massacres by the military have made some officials in Washington uneasy. On Wednesday, a State Department spokesman warned that “Nigeria’s security forces must protect civilians in any security response in a way that respects human rights and the rule of law.” The spokesman, Patrick Ventrell, added that “we have made clear to the Nigerian government that its heavy-handed response to insecurity in northern Nigeria and the failure to address human rights violations will potentially affect our ability to provide security assistance going forward.” The scope of the current military operation appears somewhat larger than similar predecessors, although the northeast was already heavily militarized before the operation began, with numerous checkpoints on the region’s roads, sandbagged military emplacements throughout Maiduguri and convoys of soldiers bristling with weapons regularly racing through the city’s dusty streets. “Advancing troops of Special Task Force have destroyed some terrorist camps sited in the forests of Northern and central Borno,” said a statement from Nigeria’s Defence Headquarters that was sent to reporters from the country’s capital, Abuja, on Friday. “Heavy weapons including antiaircraft and anti-tank guns were also destroyed in the process.” “The special operations which preceded troops’ movement has resulted in the destruction of much of the insurgents’ weapons and logistics such as vehicles, containers, fuel dumps and power generators,” the statement said, adding that “the casualties inflicted on the insurgents in the cause of the assault will be verified during mop-up." An army spokesman, Brig. Gen. Chris Olukolade, said in a brief phone interview from Abuja that “the air force led the assault, helicopters and fighter jets,” targeting “all the camps spread across border towns.” Critics wondered whether it would seriously disrupt the hit- and-run guerrilla insurgency of Boko Haram. “We may win the battle but we may not win the war,” said Kole Shettima, the chairman of the Center for Democracy and Development , a research organization in Abuja. The army “may succeed in disbanding some of the camps, but eventually, the insurgents being essentially mobile and nomadic in their activities, they will resurface,” Mr. Shettima said. “They may even attempt to attack us in different parts of the country.” In Maiduguri, Islamist militants often come from and blend in with the civilian population, and in the extreme north, soldiers were conducting house-to-house searches for Boko Haram members, according to a military official in Maiduguri who was not authorized to speak publicly. The operations in the forested area to the south are proceeding with some difficulty, the official said, because the insurgents’ camps are hidden by the trees. He added that the forest had been “cordoned off” to forestall any attempts at escape. Hamza Idris contributed from Bauchi, Nigeria. |
MAIDUGURI, Nigeria (Reuters) - Nigerian forces used jets and attack helicopters to bombard militant camps in the northeast on Friday, their biggest offensive since Boko Haram began an insurgency almost four years ago to try create a breakaway Islamic state. Defense spokesman Brigadier- General Chris Olukolade said in a statement that troops had destroyed several Boko Haram camps and weapons stockpiles in forests around Borno state, epicenter of the uprising and relic of a medieval Islamic empire. "Heavy weapons including anti- aircraft and anti-tank guns were also destroyed in the process," he said. "The special operations ... resulted in the destruction of much of the insurgents' weapons and logistics such as vehicles, containers, fuel dumps and power generators." He said the death toll amongst the insurgents would be verified during mop-up exercises in the camps, including in the Sambisa game reserve in Borno state. A military source said at least 30 insurgents had been killed in one operation. Nigerian forces are trying to regain territory controlled by well-armed militants in remote northeastern stronghold states of Borno, Yobe and Adamawa, put under a state of emergency by President Goodluck Jonathan on Tuesday. |
MAIDUGURI, Nigeria (Reuters) - Nigerian forces used jets and attack helicopters to bombard militant camps in the northeast on Friday, their biggest offensive since Boko Haram began an insurgency almost four years ago to try create a breakaway Islamic state. Defense spokesman Brigadier- General Chris Olukolade said in a statement that troops had destroyed several Boko Haram camps and weapons stockpiles in forests around Borno state, epicenter of the uprising and relic of a medieval Islamic empire. "Heavy weapons including anti- aircraft and anti-tank guns were also destroyed in the process," he said. "The special operations ... resulted in the destruction of much of the insurgents' weapons and logistics such as vehicles, containers, fuel dumps and power generators." He said the death toll amongst the insurgents would be verified during mop-up exercises in the camps, including in the Sambisa game reserve in Borno state. A military source said at least 30 insurgents had been killed in one operation. Nigerian forces are trying to regain territory controlled by well-armed militants in remote northeastern stronghold states of Borno, Yobe and Adamawa, put under a state of emergency by President Goodluck Jonathan on Tuesday. |
Nigerian troops mounted air and ground attacks on camps used by the militant Islamist Boko Haram group in the northeast, destroying anti- aircraft and anti-tank weapons, a military spokesman said. “An air campaign was carried out before soldiers went into the area,” Chris Olukolade, a spokesman for Defense Headquarters, said today by phone from Abuja, the capital. The attacks in the northern and central parts of Borno state were carried out yesterday and “troops have taken over the place after destroying the camps,” he said. The military campaign follows President Goodluck Jonathan’s May 14 declaration of emergency rule in the three northeastern states of Borno, Yobe and Adamawa to tackle the insurgency by the Boko Haram group that has killed thousands since 2009. Parts of the country’s northeast were being taken over by Islamist militants, Jonathan said. Jonathan’s action followed violence in the northeastern Baga, a fishing town on the shores of Lake Chad, that killed as many as 228 people after security forces responded to an attack by militants on April 16, according to local officials. The army says 30 insurgents, six civilians and a soldier were killed, and 30 houses were burned down. New York-based Human Rights Watch said satellite images of Baga show at least 2,000 homes were destroyed. |
Nigerian Jets Destroy Heavy Weapons in Raid on Islamists By Maram Mazen May 17, 2013 12:17 PM EDT facebook twitter Share on save Tap 'Save' to read later Nigerian troops mounted air and ground attacks on camps used by the militant Islamist Boko Haram group in the northeast, destroying anti- aircraft and anti-tank weapons, a military spokesman said. “An air campaign was carried out before soldiers went into the area,” Chris Olukolade, a spokesman for Defense Headquarters, said today by phone from Abuja, the capital. The attacks in the northern and central parts of Borno state were carried out yesterday and “troops have taken over the place after destroying the camps,” he said. The military campaign follows President Goodluck Jonathan’s May 14 declaration of emergency rule in the three northeastern states of Borno, Yobe and Adamawa to tackle the insurgency by the Boko Haram group that has killed thousands since 2009. Parts of the country’s northeast were being taken over by Islamist militants, Jonathan said. Jonathan’s action followed violence in the northeastern Baga, a fishing town on the shores of Lake Chad, that killed as many as 228 people after security forces responded to an attack by militants on April 16, according to local officials. The army says 30 insurgents, six civilians and a soldier were killed, and 30 houses were burned down. New York-based Human Rights Watch said satellite images of Baga show at least 2,000 homes were destroyed. 1 Like |
The Nigerian military has launched air raids on militant training camps in the north-east of the country, officials say.http://m.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-22570071 1 Like |
At least 30 militants have been killed during air raids on their training camps in north-eastern Nigeria, officials say. An army spokesman said jets and helicopter gunships had been used to attack several camps. He told the BBC that a plane had been hit by anti-aircraft fire but had managed to return to base. States of emergency were declared this week in three north-eastern states hit by Boko Haram's Islamist insurgency. Nigerian forces are trying to regain control in the states of Adamawa, Yobe and Borno. Meanwhile, explosions and gunfire have been heard overnight in Katsina state. Residents have told the BBC's Hausa service that banks, police stations and prisons were destroyed in the town of Daura, near the border with Niger. They said they had seen the bodies of five members of the security forces and three militants, but there has been no official confirmation of casualties. Mobile phone networks were not functioning in many parts of north-east Nigeria on Thursday. A security official told the AP news agency that the mobile phone service had been shut down during the military operation. Militants have previously attacked mobile phone masts in the area in an effort to disrupt communications. Residents staying inside Some of the camps hit by air raids were in the Sambisa Game Reserve, about 70km (45 miles) south of the Borno state capital, Maiduguri, where the militants first emerged in 2009, said Nigerian military spokesman Brig Gen Chris Olukolade. He told the BBC that 30 militants had been killed since the latest offensive began on Wednesday. There is no independent confirmation of the number of deaths. The aim is to "destroy [Boko Haram] bases, apprehend as many of them as possible and bring them to justice", Brig Gen Olukolade said. "It is not just Sambisa, every camp is under attack," the Reuters news agency quoted him as saying. In January, the military said it had deployed helicopter gunships to destroy Boko Haram camps in the reserve, not far from Bama, where 55 people were killed in militant attacks last week. Brig Gen Olukolade said the plane damaged by anti-aircraft fire had returned to base safely, while the "terrorist base" was subsequently "completely destroyed". This is the first time Boko Haram has been reported to have used such heavy weaponry against aircraft. A Maiduguri resident told the BBC that the city was unusually quiet on Friday, with most people staying inside. Brig Gen Olukolade said "several thousand" troops had been sent to the three north-eastern states to tackle Boko Haram. The three semi-desert states, which border Niger, Chad and Cameroon, are roughly the size of England or the US state of Illinois but have a population of just 10 million. The BBC's Will Ross in Abuja says targeting Boko Haram's rural bases or training camps should pose no great challenge for the military; the hardest part of this campaign will be in urban areas like Maiduguri, where the militants are living among the civilian population. The president said the army would take "all necessary action" to "put an end to the impunity of insurgents and terrorists", saying they had taken down the Nigerian flag and replaced it with a foreign emblem in some parts of the country. Human rights organisations have criticised some of the Nigerian military's previous operations because of the resulting civilian casualties. Boko Haram, whose name means "Western education is forbidden" in the local Hausa language, is fighting to overthrow the government and create an Islamic state in the north. Although they often attack Christians and government targets, they have also killed many Muslim civilians. |
SOME REACTIONS FROM LONDON AND USA CITIZENS A good start. Let them know Mrs. Allah is waiting for them with a new flock of virgin sheep. James King, 2 hrs ago Not a single extremist deserves to walk this earth. I hope all extremists die the most horrible death possible. claro, 1 hr ago How long will NATO & 0dumba let Nigeria use airpower against those "peaceful rebels" ? Richard, 1 min ago I'm proud to be a Muslim,hate to be an extremist.the holy quran recognizes Jesus christ as prophet Isa and his mother mary as Mariam! why would any one want to carry an attack against his fellows.I love my Christian friends,we serve just one God'who the holy quran describes as the master of the day of judgment.so who are you to say you want to fight for him. murphy, 2 hrs ago Bleed them all! Slaughter each and every muslim that's the only way to be sure. F.U.ALL, 1 hr ago Post |
Omen100: THIS TOPIC OF DISCUSSION IS SICK BECAUSE THE POSTER IS UNCONDITIONALLY SICK & THIS TOPIC IS FOR SICK PEOPLE WHO ARE AGAINST PEACE & UNITY AMONG NIGERIANS, ALTHOUGH I AM NOT SICK LIKE POSTER, I ONLY SUCCEEDED IN FINDING OUT THE PURPOSE THIS TOPIC BY DIAGNOSING IT & STUDYING HIS/HER POSTING STYLE & THE USERNAME HAS SAID IT ALL., HE/SHE IS ONLY HERE TO PROLIFERATE HATES BETWEEN THE NORTH & THE SOUTH.pls just bookmark the page. Comments are not allow to aviod jamming the thread with silly talks. Thanks 2 Likes |
Nigeria Soldiers Sealed Up Cameroon Border, Surronds Boko Haram Base in Krenuwa by Biafra4tharmy(m): 2:31pm In the town of Gamburu Ngala on the border with Cameroon in northern Borno, residents said that heavily armed troops and tanks arrived on Wednesday, sealing off previously unmanned border posts. Northeast Nigeria, the epicentre of the Boko Haram insurgency, has porous borders with Cameroon, Chad and Niger, with criminal groups and militants flowing freely between the countries. "Since January the border posts have been abandoned...but now these posts have been taken over by soldiers," said resident Haruna Garba. Olukolade confirmed that forces had been sent to the region, but would not say whether the borders had been sealed. Reports of Boko Haram's presence in Cameroon first emerged in February, following the kidnap there of a French family visiting a game park near the Nigerian border. The abduction was claimed by Boko Haram and the family was released in April. Soldiers have surrounded the town of Krenuwa in Marte district, also in northern Borno and one of the areas where Boko Haram has taken power, chased away all government officials and removed Nigerian flags, residents said. Abur Kullima told AFP Friday that he fled his home in Krenuwa in fear of the coming assault. He said that after the state of emergency was declared in a national broadcast late Tuesday, Islamist gunmen began moving through the district trying to mobilise people "in preparation to face Nigerian troops." "I was so scared for my life and my family's, which led me to decide to leave," he told AFP from Gamburu Ngala, where he is staying with a friend. Anyone who tries to leave Krenuwa is screened by the soldiers who have encircled the town, he said. Boko Haram has become notorious for blending in with the local population, both in towns and major cities where they have carried out suicide bombings as well as gun and bomb assaults. The group says it is fighting to create an Islamic state in Nigeria's mainly Muslim north, but its demands have repeatedly shifted. Some believe it has sought closer ties to foreign extremist groups like Al-Qaeda's North Africa affiliate, but most analysts believe its agenda is primarily domestic. Nigeria is Africa's top oil producer but the population remains extremely poor and many of Boko Haram's fighters are believed to be youths radicalised out of frustration with government corruption. The conflict is estimated to have cost 3,600 lives since 2009, including killings by the security forces. |
In the town of Gamburu Ngala on the border with Cameroon in northern Borno, residents said that heavily armed troops and tanks arrived on Wednesday, sealing off previously unmanned border posts. Northeast Nigeria, the epicentre of the Boko Haram insurgency, has porous borders with Cameroon, Chad and Niger, with criminal groups and militants flowing freely between the countries. "Since January the border posts have been abandoned...but now these posts have been taken over by soldiers," said resident Haruna Garba. Olukolade confirmed that forces had been sent to the region, but would not say whether the borders had been sealed. Reports of Boko Haram's presence in Cameroon first emerged in February, following the kidnap there of a French family visiting a game park near the Nigerian border. The abduction was claimed by Boko Haram and the family was released in April. Soldiers have surrounded the town of Krenuwa in Marte district, also in northern Borno and one of the areas where Boko Haram has taken power, chased away all government officials and removed Nigerian flags, residents said. Abur Kullima told AFP Friday that he fled his home in Krenuwa in fear of the coming assault. He said that after the state of emergency was declared in a national broadcast late Tuesday, Islamist gunmen began moving through the district trying to mobilise people "in preparation to face Nigerian troops." "I was so scared for my life and my family's, which led me to decide to leave," he told AFP from Gamburu Ngala, where he is staying with a friend. Anyone who tries to leave Krenuwa is screened by the soldiers who have encircled the town, he said. Boko Haram has become notorious for blending in with the local population, both in towns and major cities where they have carried out suicide bombings as well as gun and bomb assaults. The group says it is fighting to create an Islamic state in Nigeria's mainly Muslim north, but its demands have repeatedly shifted. Some believe it has sought closer ties to foreign extremist groups like Al-Qaeda's North Africa affiliate, but most analysts believe its agenda is primarily domestic. Nigeria is Africa's top oil producer but the population remains extremely poor and many of Boko Haram's fighters are believed to be youths radicalised out of frustration with government corruption. The conflict is estimated to have cost 3,600 lives since 2009, including killings by the security forces. |
Nigerian forces bombard Islamist militant camps from the air Reuters - 15 mins ago By Lanre Ola MAIDUGURI (Reuters) - Nigerian forces used jets and attack helicopters to bombard Islamist militant camps in the northeast on Friday, in their biggest military offensive since Boko Haram launched an uprising in 2009. "A number of insurgents have been killed," the defense headquarters spokesman said, including at the Sambisa game reserve in Borno state, the epicenter of the insurgency. "It is not just Sambisa, every camp is under attack. But we have not done the mopping up operations on the ground to determine the numbers killed," Brigadier-General Chris Olukolade said by telephone. A military source, who declined to be named, said at least 30 insurgents had been killed. Nigerian forces are trying to regain territory controlled by increasingly well-armed Boko Haram Islamist insurgents in their northeastern stronghold states of Borno, Yobe and Adamawa, put under a state of emergency by President Goodluck Jonathan on Wednesday. More troops arrived in the Borno state capital Maiduguri on Friday, witnesses said. "I saw more than 20 trucks loaded with soldiers fully kitted for battle towards Marte. I wish them luck in ending this BH (Boko Haram) madness," resident Ahmed Ibrahim said by telephone. Beyond the region covered by the state of emergency, gunmen stormed a police station and a bank, the army said, a sign the offensive could provoke violence by smaller militant cells across the north. It was not clear who carried out the attack. Boko Haram, other Islamist militant groups such as al-Qaeda linked Ansaru and associated criminal gangs have become the biggest threat to stability in Africa's top oil producer. Thousands have been killed since Boko Haram launched an uprising almost four years ago in an effort to create an Islamic state in a country of about 170 million split roughly equally between Christians, who are the majority in the south, and Muslims, who predominate in the north. Violence has mostly happened far from the commercial hub Lagos or political capital Abuja, and hundreds of miles away from oilfields in the southeast. Military jets, helicopter gunships and thousands of troops are involved in the current offensive, which may answer some critics who accuse Jonathan, a southern Christian, of underestimating the severity of the crisis in the Muslim north. Rights groups are concerned the state of emergency will lead to more abuses they have document by Nigerian forces. |
Official: Nigeria military shells camps, kills 21 Associated Press - 31 mins ago MAIDUGURI, Nigeria (AP) — Soldiers in northeast Nigeria shelled suspected camps of Islamic extremists in the first military action of a new offensive against the insurgents, killing at least 21 people, a security official said Friday. The fighting was in the Sambisa Forest Reserve, just south of Maiduguri, the capital of Borno state, which soldiers previously raided on the hunt for fighters belonging to the extremist network known as Boko Haram. Meanwhile, gunmen launched an assault on the hometown of one of Nigeria's former military rulers hundreds of miles (kilometers) away, attacking a police station and banks. Soldiers started the attack on Sambisa Forest Reserve on Thursday, having previously converged in the area in advance of President Goodluck Jonathan's state of emergency decree affecting three states in the nation's northeast, a security official said. The shelling killed at least 21 suspected Islamic extremists, the official said. There was no independent confirmation of the assault or casualties. "We are not going to leave the forest until it's over," the official said, referring to the emergency rule. The official spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity as he was not authorized to speak publicly about the ongoing military operation. Brig. Gen. Chris Olukolade, a military spokesman based in Nigeria's capital, Abuja, could not be immediately reached for comment Friday. In a related development, mobile phone service returned Friday morning to parts of northeast Nigeria after being cut Thursday. The security official told the AP that the service cut came on the orders of Nigeria's government and security forces as soldiers moved into the northeast to begin operations. The official said service likely would be shut off again. Mobile phones have become the only real communication device in Nigeria for both voice calls and the Internet, as the state- run telephone company collapsed years ago. By cutting off service at towers, the military could stop extremists from receiving warnings or intelligence ahead of their operations. Authorities said Thursday they had no information about the service cutoff or refused to comment. Nigeria's military and security forces have tracked fighters by their mobile phone signals in the past as well, prompting extremists from Boko Haram to attack mobile phone towers in the region. Under the president's directive, soldiers have ultimate control over security matters in Adamawa, Borno and Yobe states. Over the last few days, witnesses and AP journalists have seen convoys of soldiers in trucks and buses moving through the region, as well as trucks carrying armored personnel carriers. Jet fighters also have been seen flying low over Yola, the capital of Adamawa state. This new military campaign comes on top of a previous massive deployment of soldiers and police to the region. That deployment failed to stop violence by Islamic extremists, who have killed more than 1,600 people since 2010, according to an AP count. Jonathan's emergency decree, declared on Tuesday, allows civilian governments to remain in place. Adamawa state Gov. Murtala Nyako, who belongs to Jonathan's ruling People's Democratic Party, criticized the president's decision in a radio address Thursday night. "I believe that the declaration has been a shock to the people of the state and others," Nyako said. "True, this state has witnessed a few criminal activities by armed hoodlums in the last few years, but so (have) other states in the federation." That could be seen Thursday night in Daura, a rural town in Katsina state that's the home of former military ruler and perennial presidential candidate Gen. Muhammadu Buhari. There, far from the states under emergency rule, gunmen attacked a police station and at least two banks, witnesses said. Police officials declined to immediately comment about the attack Friday. __ |
Boko Haram Attacks Daura, Buhari Hometown: Explosion, Gunfire Reported into Night Terrorists suspected to be the usual Boko Haram culprits launched a destructive attack on the hometown of ex-president, General Muhammad Buhari, Thursday night. The attack involved a police station, prison from which unspecified prisoners were released, and attacks on other facilities. An explosion was also heard near Daura Motel. The terrorists were said to have robbed a bank in an operation that lasted several hours without interference of Nigeria’s lacking security services. The Federal government of Nigeria declared a state of emergency across three north eastern states at the centers of the violence that has plagued Nigeria for several years. Katsina state, where this attack occurred is not covered by the state of emergency, however the president also promised heightened security in all states due to the predictable spillover and anger of the frustrated cult under attack. |
Military set for air strikes against Boko Haram Tweet 46 May 16, 2013 | 9:13 pm News KANO (AFP) – Nigeria’s military said Thursday that it was ready to launch air strikes against Boko Haram Islamists as several thousand troops moved to the remote northeast to retake territory seized by the insurgents. “The entire Nigerian military is involved in this operation, including the air force,” defence spokesman Brigadier General Chris Olukolade told AFP. “Definitely, air strikes will be used when necessary,” he said. A force of “several thousand” soldiers along with fighter jets and helicopter gunships have been deployed for the offensive in Borno, Yobe and Adamawa state, he added. The operation follows President Goodluck Jonathan’s decision to a impose a state of emergency in all three areas as he admitted that Boko Haram had “taken over” territory in the northeast and declared war against the government. The Islamists, who have said they are fighting to create an Islamic state in Nigeria’s mainly Muslim north, have become emboldened and better armed in recent months. The military spokesman said operations had begun in all three states, but declined to provide specifics. The operation is the largest against Boko Haram since 2009, when soldiers flooded Borno’s capital Maiduguri, killing more than 800 people and forcing the insurgents underground for a year. A military source who requested anonymity told AFP that Nigerian forces “raided some terrorist camps in the Sambisa Game Reserve,” in northern Borno, early on Wednesday. Zangina Kyarimi, who lives in the remote town of Marti in northern Borno towards the border with Chad, said that “large military teams” arrived late Wednesday. “I saw dozens of military vans and trucks accompanied by tanks,” he said by phone from the town, which is considered a Boko Haram stronghold. “We are afraid of what might happen in the coming days. We are thinking of leaving,” he said. In Adamawa, a dusk-to- dawn curfew has been imposed, with all residents forced to stay indoors after sundown, the area’s military spokesman Lieutenant Ja- afar Mohammed Nuhu told AFP. In Yobe state in the town of Gashua, scene of a deadly Boko Haram attack on April 26, a convoy of military personnel rolled through heading north to the Niger border, resident Musa Saminu said. “Some of them went to the banks and asked them to close down as a precaution,” he told AFP. While the military has vowed that the operation will “rid the nation’s border territories of terrorist bases,” there are doubts as to whether the security forces have the capacity to end the insurgency. “The military is already overstretched,” former US ambassador to Nigeria John Campbell said Wednesday in an article for the Council on Foreign Relations. The northeastern borders with Cameroon, Chad and Niger are porous, with criminal groups and weapons moving freely between countries. Analysts warn that despite the military buildup, Boko Haram could scatter and find new safe havens. Many have urged Nigeria to address the social causes fuelling the insurgency, including acute poverty and frustration over excessive government corruption. Nigeria is Africa’s top oil producer, but most of its estimated 160 million people still live on less than two dollars a day. Nigeria’s security forces have been accused of massive rights abuses in campaigns against Boko Haram, which may have amounted to crimes against humanity, according to Human Rights Watch. The US State Department on Wednesday warned that any “heavy-handed” tactics or disregard for human rights during the emergency operations could damage bilateral relations. Boko Haram is believed to be led by Abubakar Shekau, declared a global terrorist by the United States, but the extent of his control is unclear. Shekau has rejected any form of negotiation with Nigeria’s government. The Boko Haram conflict is estimated to have cost 3,600 lives since 2010, including killings by the security forces.Military set for air strikes against Boko Haram Tweet 46 May 16, 2013 | 9:13 pm News KANO (AFP) – Nigeria’s military said Thursday that it was ready to launch air strikes against Boko Haram Islamists as several thousand troops moved to the remote northeast to retake territory seized by the insurgents. “The entire Nigerian military is involved in this operation, including the air force,” defence spokesman Brigadier General Chris Olukolade told AFP. “Definitely, air strikes will be used when necessary,” he said. A force of “several thousand” soldiers along with fighter jets and helicopter gunships have been deployed for the offensive in Borno, Yobe and Adamawa state, he added. The operation follows President Goodluck Jonathan’s decision to a impose a state of emergency in all three areas as he admitted that Boko Haram had “taken over” territory in the northeast and declared war against the government. The Islamists, who have said they are fighting to create an Islamic state in Nigeria’s mainly Muslim north, have become emboldened and better armed in recent months. The military spokesman said operations had begun in all three states, but declined to provide specifics. The operation is the largest against Boko Haram since 2009, when soldiers flooded Borno’s capital Maiduguri, killing more than 800 people and forcing the insurgents underground for a year. A military source who requested anonymity told AFP that Nigerian forces “raided some terrorist camps in the Sambisa Game Reserve,” in northern Borno, early on Wednesday. Zangina Kyarimi, who lives in the remote town of Marti in northern Borno towards the border with Chad, said that “large military teams” arrived late Wednesday. “I saw dozens of military vans and trucks accompanied by tanks,” he said by phone from the town, which is considered a Boko Haram stronghold. “We are afraid of what might happen in the coming days. We are thinking of leaving,” he said. In Adamawa, a dusk-to- dawn curfew has been imposed, with all residents forced to stay indoors after sundown, the area’s military spokesman Lieutenant Ja- afar Mohammed Nuhu told AFP. In Yobe state in the town of Gashua, scene of a deadly Boko Haram attack on April 26, a convoy of military personnel rolled through heading north to the Niger border, resident Musa Saminu said. “Some of them went to the banks and asked them to close down as a precaution,” he told AFP. While the military has vowed that the operation will “rid the nation’s border territories of terrorist bases,” there are doubts as to whether the security forces have the capacity to end the insurgency. “The military is already overstretched,” former US ambassador to Nigeria John Campbell said Wednesday in an article for the Council on Foreign Relations. The northeastern borders with Cameroon, Chad and Niger are porous, with criminal groups and weapons moving freely between countries. Analysts warn that despite the military buildup, Boko Haram could scatter and find new safe havens. Many have urged Nigeria to address the social causes fuelling the insurgency, including acute poverty and frustration over excessive government corruption. Nigeria is Africa’s top oil producer, but most of its estimated 160 million people still live on less than two dollars a day. Nigeria’s security forces have been accused of massive rights abuses in campaigns against Boko Haram, which may have amounted to crimes against humanity, according to Human Rights Watch. The US State Department on Wednesday warned that any “heavy-handed” tactics or disregard for human rights during the emergency operations could damage bilateral relations. Boko Haram is believed to be led by Abubakar Shekau, declared a global terrorist by the United States, but the extent of his control is unclear. Shekau has rejected any form of negotiation with Nigeria’s government. The Boko Haram conflict is estimated to have cost 3,600 lives since 2010, including killings by the security forces.Military set for air strikes against Boko Haram Tweet 46 May 16, 2013 | 9:13 pm News KANO (AFP) – Nigeria’s military said Thursday that it was ready to launch air strikes against Boko Haram Islamists as several thousand troops moved to the remote northeast to retake territory seized by the insurgents. “The entire Nigerian military is involved in this operation, including the air force,” defence spokesman Brigadier General Chris Olukolade told AFP. “Definitely, air strikes will be used when necessary,” he said. A force of “several thousand” soldiers along with fighter jets and helicopter gunships have been deployed for the offensive in Borno, Yobe and Adamawa state, he added. The operation follows President Goodluck Jonathan’s decision to a impose a state of emergency in all three areas as he admitted that Boko Haram had “taken over” territory in the northeast and declared war against the government. The Islamists, who have said they are fighting to create an Islamic state in Nigeria’s mainly Muslim north, have become emboldened and better armed in recent months. The military spokesman said operations had begun in all three states, but declined to provide specifics. The operation is the largest against Boko Haram since 2009, when soldiers flooded Borno’s capital Maiduguri, killing more than 800 people and forcing the insurgents underground for a year. A military source who requested anonymity told AFP that Nigerian forces “raided some terrorist camps in the Sambisa Game Reserve,” in northern Borno, early on Wednesday. Zangina Kyarimi, who lives in the remote town of Marti in northern Borno towards the border with Chad, said that “large military teams” arrived late Wednesday. “I saw dozens of military vans and trucks accompanied by tanks,” he said by phone from the town, which is considered a Boko Haram stronghold. “We are afraid of what might happen in the coming days. We are thinking of leaving,” he said. In Adamawa, a dusk-to- dawn curfew has been imposed, with all residents forced to stay indoors after sundown, the area’s military spokesman Lieutenant Ja- afar Mohammed Nuhu told AFP. In Yobe state in the town of Gashua, scene of a deadly Boko Haram attack on April 26, a convoy of military personnel rolled through heading north to the Niger border, resident Musa Saminu said. “Some of them went to the banks and asked them to close down as a precaution,” he told AFP. While the military has vowed that the operation will “rid the nation’s border territories of terrorist bases,” there are doubts as to whether the security forces have the capacity to end the insurgency. “The military is already overstretched,” former US ambassador to Nigeria John Campbell said Wednesday in an article for the Council on Foreign Relations. The northeastern borders with Cameroon, Chad and Niger are porous, with criminal groups and weapons moving freely between countries. Analysts warn that despite the military buildup, Boko Haram could scatter and find new safe havens. Many have urged Nigeria to address the social causes fuelling the insurgency, including acute poverty and frustration over excessive government corruption. Nigeria is Africa’s top oil producer, but most of its estimated 160 million people still live on less than two dollars a day. Nigeria’s security forces have been accused of massive rights abuses in campaigns against Boko Haram, which may have amounted to crimes against humanity, according to Human Rights Watch. The US State Department on Wednesday warned that any “heavy-handed” tactics or disregard for human rights during the emergency operations could damage bilateral relations. Boko Haram is believed to be led by Abubakar Shekau, declared a global terrorist by the United States, but the extent of his control is unclear. Shekau has rejected any form of negotiation with Nigeria’s government. The Boko Haram conflict is estimated to have cost 3,600 lives since 2010, including killings by the security forces. |
As Nigerians debate the possibility of granting amnesty to militants in Nigeria’s north, the country marks the fourth anniversary of its amnesty program for militants in the South. Some former militants in the Niger Delta region are opening small businesses while others are bitterly disappointed, saying without change, renewed violence is inevitable. On some Nigerian newspaper websites, there are polls asking users if they believe the government should offer amnesty to Boko Haram militants, a group blamed for thousands of deaths in the past four years. On one such website, the largest voter block was for this option: “No, they have killed innocents and should be brought to book.” For many Nigerians, though, the idea of peace through amnesty has been tested at least somewhat successfully in the oil-rich southern Niger Delta, where militants waged war against the government and oil companies for several years. Niger Delta program Analysts are quick to point out that the conflict in the Niger Delta was very different from the current Boko Haram conflict. Boko Haram is a shadowy militant group that says it’s fighting for Islamic law and to free its imprisoned members. The Niger Delta militancy was an offshoot of a popular movement calling for the equitable distribution of oil wealth. In the Niger Delta, however, some former militants say the amnesty program is preventing another uprising. Epipade Kemepade, 30, used to be in charge of dispatching weapons among his fellow militants, or “freedom fighters” as they called themselves. In 2009, along with tens of thousands of other young men, he turned in his gun in exchange for the promise of job training and slightly more than $400 a month. Now, he’s a trained welder and has his own shop. He also is among 300 former militants who were promised new equipment a month ago to grow their businesses, but it hasn’t yet arrived. On the other hand, other former militants say Kemepade is the exception and most of the “boys” - as they are known locally - are returning from training to find no jobs and no capital to start a business. Remaining issues Charles Efenudu said that after he turned in his weapons he was trained in business and was told he could open a small grocery store when he completed the course. That was two years ago, and he continues to trudge out to the cassava fields, making barely enough money to survive. “I’m trying to work on a farm to succeed by myself because the federal government is not doing any good about our training. So we just sit at home doing nothing,” said Efenudu. Perye Williams is a lawyer and an activist in Warri, an oil town that is technically at peace, but tensions and crime levels are noticeably high. He said the amnesty program by nature doesn’t address the underlying causes of the conflict, which echo what some say are the underlying causes of the Boko Haram conflict in the north: extreme poverty, underdevelopment, lack of jobs and schools, and the general feeling that the government doesn’t care to fix any of it. He said the amnesty program plays favorites and ultimately won’t maintain the peace. “It still boils down to the Nigerian system of nepotism and favoritism. Provide good roads. Provide electricity. Provide viable water. Provide hospitals in these communities and every other thing will be taken care of by the people,” said Williams. In the north, Boko Haram members have flatly rejected the idea of accepting amnesty, saying the government should be asking for amnesty from them. Hilary Uguru contributed to this report from the Niger Delta. More from the topic News / Africa RELATED ARTICLES Ex-militants pose for a group photograph in Port Harcourt in the Niger Delta region, Nigeria, April 3, 2011. Ex-militants pose for a group photograph in Port Harcourt in the Niger Delta region, Nigeria, April 3, 2011. Nigeria Launches |
Pls my viewers i will appreciate if you like this page to enable you follow my update on this conflict. But pls aviod making comments, so that we dont jam this thread with many unimportant talks. Thanks 2 Likes |
MAIDUGURI/YOLA, Nigeria (Reuters) - Nigerian forces attacked Islamist strongholds in the northeast on Thursday, security sources said as an offensive got under way to wrest back territory from increasingly well-armed Boko Haram insurgents. Soldiers raided areas in the Sambisa Game Reserve, a remote savannah of some 500 sq km (200 sq miles) in Borno state where Islamists have established bases, said two sources who spoke on condition of anonymity. They gave no further details. Preparing for possible further action across three frontier states where President Goodluck Jonathan declared a state of emergency on Tuesday, the armed forces also deployed jet fighters and helicopter gunships to the region. Rights groups said they feared for the safety of civilians from combatants on both sides, but Jonathan's move enjoys widespread public support after more than three years of trying to contain the insurgency without notable success. It follows an upsurge in violence against government and Christian targets in the northeast by Islamists who want an Islamic state in Nigeria. Africa's most populous nation's 170 million people are split evenly between Christians, who dominate in the south, and Muslims, who are the majority in the north. Little detail was available from Sambisa. Nigerian forces have attacked Islamist bases in the area of the game reserve before, as recently as February, to rout militants seen as the biggest security threat to Africa's top energy producer. The emergency affects the semi- desert states of Borno, Yobe and Adamawa, which variously border Niger, Chad and Cameroon and cover some 150,000 sq km (60,000 sq miles) - an area similar to England or Illinois, but with a population of only 10 million. A Reuters reporter saw two Alpha light attack jets land at Yola in Adamawa state. Air Force spokesman Air Commodore Yusuf Anas confirmed that "air assets", also including helicopter gunships, had been sent to support ground troops. A military source said there could be air strikes on Islamist bases. HUMAN COST In the 1980s, military leaders used air power to put down religiously inspired protests during a crackdown that left some 5,000 people dead, according to state media at the time. Telephone connections to Borno and Yobe were almost completely cut on Thursday. In Adamawa, where a new, 12- hour overnight curfew was declared - the other two states were already under curfew - some cautiously welcomed the offensive. "This state has been under the control of gunmen for so long, it's been long overdue," said Audu John, a market trader. But another man, Ahmed Usman, feared civilians would become targets for killings or torture by a military notorious for abuses. His family was evacuating as soon as possible, he said. The Islamist insurgency has cost thousands of lives since it began in 2009, when a crackdown killed 800 people, including Boko Haram founder Mohammed Yusuf, who died in police custody. Because it has mostly happened far from economic centers such as the commercial hub Lagos or political capital Abuja - and because it is hundreds of miles away from oilfields in the southeast - it has not been a priority for the establishment. The offensive ordered by Jonathan, a southern Christian, may answer critics who had accused him of failing to address the crisis: "The federal government has come to terms with the bleak reality that what we are facing is ... terrorism in its most horrific form," the Punch newspaper said in an editorial. "Nigeria is teetering on the precipice of disintegration. "It is time to act decisively." But the United States expressed concern about a worsening "cycle of violence" on Wednesday, a view echoed by human rights groups Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch on Thursday. Both have documented cases of abuses by Nigerian forces, including summary executions and random shootings. At Human Rights Watch, Eric Guttschuss said: "If the military continues its practice of targeting civilians, there is a risk of massive abuses during this offensive." 1 Like |
MAIDUGURI, Nigeria (AP) — Mobile phone service was cut off Thursday in areas of northeast Nigeria as jet fighters streaked through the sky and more soldiers were deployed to fight Islamic extremists waging a brutal insurgency. Witnesses saw low-flying Nigerian jet fighters over Yola, the capital of Adamawa state, which President Goodluck Jonathan placed under emergency rule on Tuesday along with Borno and Yobe states. However, soldiers have met "no resistance" yet from extremists who have taken over villages and small towns in this region approaching the Sahara Desert, a military spokesman said. An Associated Press journalist in Maiduguri, the capital of Borno state, found cell-phone services unavailable since early Thursday morning on all of the country's major mobile phone carriers. Mobile phone numbers belonging to government officials and military officials there and in neighboring Yobe state could not be reached. Mobile phones have become the only real communication device in Nigeria for both voice calls and the Internet, as the state- run telephone company collapsed years ago. By cutting off service at towers, the military could stop extremists from receiving warnings or intelligence ahead of their operations. Authorities said they had no information about the service cutoff or refused to comment. Nigeria's military and security forces have tracked fighters by their mobile phone signals in the past as well, prompting extremists from the radical Islamic network known as Boko Haram to attack mobile phone towers in the region. Under the president's directive, soldiers have ultimate control over security matters in the three states, though his order allows civilian governments to remain in place. Over the last few days, witnesses and AP journalists have seen convoys of soldiers in trucks and buses moving through the region, as well as trucks carrying armored personnel carriers. Nigeria's military has promised a "massive deployment of men and resources" but has declined to specify the numbers involved. Brig. Gen. Chris Olukolade, a military spokesman based in Nigeria's capital, Abuja, said more soldiers were en route to the region Thursday. Any assaults by ground forces also could be backed up by attack helicopters and jet fighter bombings, Olukolade said, though soldiers have yet to have a serious firefight with insurgents. "The progress has been met with no resistance," Olukolade told The Associated Press. This new military campaign comes on top of a previous massive deployment of soldiers and police to the region. That deployment failed to stop violence by Islamic extremists, who have killed more than 1,600 people since 2010, according to an AP count. Nigeria's military has said Islamic fighters now use anti- aircraft guns mounted on trucks to fight the nation's soldiers, raising the possibility that the country's already overstretched security forces are becoming outgunned. With some soldiers sent to assist in the French-led anti-jihadist operation in Mali, and others serving elsewhere in Nigeria dealing with other security challenges, the 76,000- man force is creaking under the pressure, said former U.S. Ambassador to Nigeria John Campbell. "While the Islamist insurgents do not offer a viable political alternative and remain divided among themselves, the threat they pose to Nigeria's political and economic future are significant, as Jonathan's state of emergency recognizes," Campbell wrote in an analysis published Wednesday by the Council on Foreign Relations. Soldiers will now try to control an arid region of some 155,000 square kilometers (60,000 square miles), with powers to arrest anyone and take over any building. That also has led to worries about the military abusing and potentially killing civilians, which has happened repeatedly in the past and during the country's current struggle with the Islamic insurgents. Asked about what soldiers would do to prevent the death of civilians, Olukolade said the troops had been "fully briefed" on the rules of engagement, without offering any other details. In Adamawa state on Thursday, the military announced a 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew across the entire state. Life otherwise was calm, though heavily armed soldiers had taken over for police officers on the streets of the state capital, searching vehicles and questioning drivers. But mobile phones remained without service for some in the region as Thursday night fell. Olukolade said that extremists might have sabotaged the lines. When asked whether the military or government could have ordered the lines to be turned off, the general said he "wasn't aware of that." Reuben Mouka, a spokesman for the Nigerian Communications Commission, which oversees mobile phone carriers in Africa's most populous nation, said he did not know about the services being cut off. Funmilayo Omogbenigun, a spokeswoman for Nigeria's dominant carrier, South Africa's MTN Group Ltd., would only say "no comment" when asked if the government told her company to turn off service in the area. And Emeka Oparah, a spokesman for Bharti Airtel Ltd.'s operation in Nigeria, said he had no immediate information about the service cut. ___ 1 Like |
reserve space liking it |
CAMEROONPRIDE: @ dibiachukwu why do they carry lady handbags?the Ladys' handbag is part of the campaign . The bag carry an inscription *made in Biafra* the rally was meant also to showcase Biafra innovative prowess and production of Handbags both male and female as well |
me_for_you: This isreali flag and the man dancing azonto picture has benn here since time immemorial. D Ops upload it whenever they mention biafra. And I can't remember isreal supporting biafra but tanzania and haiti did for sure. If igbos want to go their seperate ways, then why don't u let us go? Is this marriage 'of the irreconciables forged by lord lugard and named by lord lugard's girlfriend' by force? U hate igbos, call them all sorts of names, yet u don't want us to go our seperate ways. Habai did nt upload that azonto pics |
CAMEROONPRIDE: Why the lady handbag?no Israel flag was display. Look at the original picture of yesterday protest 1 Like |
Commercial activities and vehicular movements were paralyzed for hours, Tuesday, in the commercial city of Onitsha, Anambra State following a peaceful demonstration by over 1000 members of the Movement for the Actualization of the Sovereign State of Brafia, MASSOB, to rehearse their proposed June 8 sit-at-home order. Apparently to ensure the success and active participation of all Igbo citizens at home and in diaspora during the exercise, the MASSOB members, led by their Onitsha Region 4 Administrator, Chief Arinze Igbani, stormed the commercial city at about noon to carry out the exercise which took place simultaneously in five major local government areas of Anambra State, including Idemili North, Idemili South, Onitsha North, Onitsha South and Ogbaru. http://www.vanguardngr.com/2013/05/onitsha-stands-still-as-massob-members-protest/ 4 Likes |
ok nah you still dey blow grammer abi? Make army people catch you for dire. My hand no dey oooh |
woow God bless Mr President Oga Jona. So now the Nigeria army can effectively deploy heavy weapons like tanks and jet bombers to flush out those ediots boko haram |
so wetin Oga Dokubo go do now? This is a litmus test for him. So war done start be dat? |
ABUJA—ANTI-Corruption Network, a non-governmental organisation, yesterday, filed a suit against former ex-militant leader, Alhaji Mujahid Dokubo-Asari, for treason over his recent statement on President Goodluck Jonathan’s re-election in 2015. The Executive Secretary of Anti-Corruption Network and former member of the House of Representatives, Dino Melaye, revealed this to journalists at a press conference held at the organisation’s headquarter in Abuja. Melaye said: ”This morning, my lawyers instituted a case against Asari-Dokubo, that Nigeria will be made ungovernable if President Jonathan isn’t re-elected in 2015.” Meanwhile, Melaye has also accused the Presidency of using oil blocks to woo Rivers State House of Assembly legislators over an alleged plan to impeach Rivers State governor, Chibuike Amaechi http://www.vanguardngr.com/2013/05/2015-group-sues-asari-dokubo-over-comment/ 3 Likes |
Boko Haram Claims Responsibility For Baga, Bama Attacks! By NewsAdmin on May 13, 2013 The Boko Haram sect on Monday claimed responsibility for recent attacks that left scores dead in Baga and Bama in Borno States. An attack on Bama left 55 people, including soldiers, policemen and prison officials dead. The claim was made by the leader of the sect, Mallam Abubakar Shekau in a 12-minute video which also showed some women and children held hostage by the terrorist sect. In the video, Shekau who sat on a rug had an AK-47 behind him as he spoke in Hausa language. He said “we are the ones that carried out the Bama attack. We also carried out the attack in Baga”. Shekau however accused the Joint Task Force of moving in after the attack to kill innocent people. “It was you, the security agents that went into the town the following day to burn houses and kill people.” In the 7th minute of the video, Shekau appeared with some women and children who he said are hostages being held in retaliation for the wives and children of Boko Haram members being held by security operatives. He said “as long as we do not see our women and children, we will not release these women and children.” While Baga residents as well as the media reported 185 deaths after the clash between soldiers and members of the Boko Haram sect, the Joint Task Force claimed only 37 people died during the clash. http://universalreporters247.blogspot.com/2013/05/boko-haram-claims-responsibility-for.html?spref=fb&m=1 |
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