Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,153,758 members, 7,820,637 topics. Date: Tuesday, 07 May 2024 at 06:38 PM

Nigerian Army Noticeably Absent In Town Taken From Boko Haram-new York Times - Politics - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / Nigerian Army Noticeably Absent In Town Taken From Boko Haram-new York Times (22517 Views)

Saraki’s CCT Trial: Agabi Absent In Court / Nigerian Troops Noticeably Absent From Fight Against Boko Haram -new York Times / Another 100 Bodies In Nigeria ‘mass Grave’ In Town Taken From Boko Haram (2) (3) (4)

(1) (2) (3) (4) (Reply) (Go Down)

Nigerian Army Noticeably Absent In Town Taken From Boko Haram-new York Times by adezt08: 2:24pm On Mar 20, 2015
DAMASAK, Nigeria — Boko Haram’s black flag is everywhere in the town of Damasak, deep in Islamist-held territory in northern Nigeria: It is painted on former administrative buildings and schools, and on the side of abandoned gas stations.

The other unmistakable sign of the Islamist militants’ recent presence is that practically none of the residents are left in a once-thriving town of 200,000. They have either fled to the state capital, Maiduguri, or been killed by Boko Haram. Every looted and battered storefront yawns open to the dusty roadside.

Mostly, the only sound in the hot, still air is from military vehicles, carrying soldiers from the neighboring countries of Chad and Niger as they make their way through the wreckage of the deadly five-month Islamist occupation of this Nigerian town. From time to time, the Chadian soldiers ululate to celebrate their victory against the militants in a fierce firefight that stretched into this week.

The Chadians ushered a small group of journalists around for a brief look at their handiwork this week, offering a rare glimpse into the group’s northern Nigerian stronghold, and into the dimensions, and difficulties, of a cross-border, four-nation fight against the Islamists.


Chadian soldiers in Damasak on Wednesday, only days after the town was liberated from Boko Haram militants. Credit Tyler Hicks/The New York Times
Rather than a display of important regional cooperation in the battle against Boko Haram, the visit instead pointed out some of the confusion and resentment that are creating tension among neighbors. The soldiers from Chad and Niger had succeeded here, but there was not a single Nigerian soldier to be found. The force members were bewildered to find themselves as foreign liberators without any help from the Nigerians.

Even as the Nigerian government, with a national election looming, insists that its forces have chased Boko Haram fighters out of much of their northern territory, the deserted streets and all-foreign force here paint a different picture. Hundreds of thousands of Nigerians still cannot return home to towns that have been, nominally at least, freed from Boko Haram.

But the foreign soldiers here said they do not want to occupy somebody else’s country, and worry that the Islamist fighters will simply return if they leave and the Nigerians have not arrived to take over.

Hundreds of miles away in N’Djamena, the capital of Chad, officials are expressing anger at the near-total absence of cooperation from the Nigerians in a crucial regional battle, even as Nigerian officials are discounting the extent of Chad’s role.

The disquiet of the Chadian officials was echoed in the words of the front-line Chadian soldiers here who wonder why they, and not the Nigerians, are holding towns like Damasak, several days after the last Boko Haram fighter has fled or been killed.

“We asked them to come, to receive this town from us, but they have not come,” said Second Lt. Mohammed Hassan, resting in the shade of the armored vehicle he had manned with his company.

“It is because they are afraid,” Lieutenant Hassan added, spitting out the words, his face half-hiddenagainst the 107-degree heat in a black turban.

Around him hundreds of soldiers from Chad and Niger were camped out under the broiling sun. The senior Chadian officers tried to shoo away a handful of journalists, but a few of the soldiers, like the lieutenant, still wanted to talk about the battle.

“We fought on the night of the 14th, and the last attack was on the 15th,” Lieutenant Hassan said. As for the Nigerians, “we called them on the 16th” — after the fight for Damasak had ended — “and told them to come; they didn’t believe we were here,” Lieutenant Hassan said.

More politely, his country’s foreign minister, Moussa Faki Mahamat, two hours away by military transport plane and helicopter in N’Djamena, offered a similar appraisal in an interview Thursday.

Soldiers from Chad played cards in Damasak. The force members were bewildered at having become foreign liberators without any help from the Nigerians. Credit Tyler Hicks/The New York Times
“The Nigerian Army has not succeeded in facing up to Boko Haram,” Mr. Mahamat said.

“The occupation of these towns, this is up to Nigeria,” he added. “My fondest wish is that they assume their responsibilities.”

The soldiers around Lieutenant Hassan, savoring their victory over Boko Haram, displayed a pile of battered rifles captured from the Islamists, some with Arabic exhortations on the stocks. The men said they had thoroughly searched the looted town and its parched savanna surroundings in the past two days, and there was not a single Boko Haram fighter to be found.

The fight was definitely over, several of the men said with satisfaction, noting with wonder the strange fighting habits and beliefs of their opponents.

“You would say that these are people ready to die, to commit suicide,” Lieutenant Hassan said.


He recounted how, after the battle, a Boko Haram prisoner seemed terrified by the Chadians’ superior matériel — Chad has perhaps the region’s best-equipped army after decades of war, civil and external. The captured fighter insisted that the lieutenant’s armored personnel carrier was self-driving and ate its opponents.

As a convoy of military vehicles rumbled down the deserted main street, a solitary older couple could be glimpsed at the back of a mud-walled compound. The woman raised clenched fists to the sky, despairingly, as the trucks passed. The soldiers said that the handful of people left in Damasak were simply too feeble to move.

Boko Haram captured the town late in November, according to Nigerian news accounts. The fighters infiltrated Damasak’s extensive market — on the border with Niger, and close to Cameroon, it was until recently a major regional trading hub — and killed merchants there to sow terror in the population, its customary method. Another group of fighters was waiting at the town’s edge and overran government buildings as the remaining soldiers were occupied at the market.

Since then, Damasak had become a regional headquarters for Boko Haram, officials in Maiduguri said. “Damasak is where they were doing their planning and operational business,” said an official close to the governor of Borno State, of which Maiduguri is the capital.

The number of substantial buildings bearing the Boko Haram insignia was testimony to the town’s strategic role for the group. “They were coordinating and doing all their training there,” the official said.

Now Damasak, like much of northeastern Nigeria, is in a vacuum. Boko Haram has been chased away for now, but it is not clear that the Nigerian Army is ready to occupy and hold this and other towns.

“It is up to them to hold the town. Not us. Our role is offensive. Our mission is to chase the terrorists,” Lieutenant Hassan said. “But they are afraid,” he repeated angrily.

“Our biggest wish is that the Nigerian Army pulls itself together — that it takes responsibility in the towns,” said Mr. Mahamat, the Chadian foreign minister. “We are ready to disengage, right away.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/03/21/world/africa/nigerian-army-noticeably-absent-in-town-taken-from-boko-haram.html

7 Likes 1 Share

Re: Nigerian Army Noticeably Absent In Town Taken From Boko Haram-new York Times by Beesluv: 2:26pm On Mar 20, 2015
Na wa o

7 Likes

Re: Nigerian Army Noticeably Absent In Town Taken From Boko Haram-new York Times by prevail23(m): 2:28pm On Mar 20, 2015
speechless!! speechless!! that's how u make me feel

17 Likes

Re: Nigerian Army Noticeably Absent In Town Taken From Boko Haram-new York Times by Nobody: 2:50pm On Mar 20, 2015
If it doesn't make sense it is because we are being deceived.

Boko Haram = Chadian troops

Nigerian corrupt government is in collusion with Chad and Boko Haram.

Why do you think that towns that are being captured by Chad are not being handed over to Nigeria?

Why do you think the residents of those towns are not being allowed to return.

Nigerians please wake up, Nigeria is being broken up and those territories under Chadian control will eventually be annexed by them.

Our government has accepted to deceptively allow the break up of Nigeria all in the name of pleasing their masters (America and Europe ) who are instructing them to allow the break up of Nigeria whilst keeping us Nigerians in the dark.

One day we would wake up to hear that Chad , Cameroon and Niger have decided to keep onto captured Nigerian territory and the UN has voted to allow them to annex those territories.

They began breaking up Nigeria when Thief Obasanjo (America's most loyal house slave) handed Bakassi over to Cameroon.

Can we see what is happening ?

Don't we even care?

7 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Nigerian Army Noticeably Absent In Town Taken From Boko Haram-new York Times by Cadamlk: 2:55pm On Mar 20, 2015
Now making the town vulnerable to more attack

1 Like

Re: Nigerian Army Noticeably Absent In Town Taken From Boko Haram-new York Times by oneda(m): 2:57pm On Mar 20, 2015
New york times? Americans? These people should just leave Nigeria alone

31 Likes 1 Share

Re: Nigerian Army Noticeably Absent In Town Taken From Boko Haram-new York Times by steppin: 2:57pm On Mar 20, 2015
grin
Re: Nigerian Army Noticeably Absent In Town Taken From Boko Haram-new York Times by Nobody: 2:57pm On Mar 20, 2015
jj
Re: Nigerian Army Noticeably Absent In Town Taken From Boko Haram-new York Times by Nobody: 2:58pm On Mar 20, 2015
.....Still 8th to commnt
When wud I be d first to comnt self?
Re: Nigerian Army Noticeably Absent In Town Taken From Boko Haram-new York Times by kasheemawo(m): 2:58pm On Mar 20, 2015
GEJ you see ya clueless life?

46 Likes

Re: Nigerian Army Noticeably Absent In Town Taken From Boko Haram-new York Times by tdayof(m): 2:58pm On Mar 20, 2015
Again
Re: Nigerian Army Noticeably Absent In Town Taken From Boko Haram-new York Times by Nobody: 2:59pm On Mar 20, 2015
Poorly funded Army, no special forces== chadians doing the heavy lifting.

Thanks for the help PDP.

10 Likes

Re: Nigerian Army Noticeably Absent In Town Taken From Boko Haram-new York Times by ifex370(m): 2:59pm On Mar 20, 2015
present

1 Like 1 Share

Re: Nigerian Army Noticeably Absent In Town Taken From Boko Haram-new York Times by Nobody: 3:01pm On Mar 20, 2015
Don't know who to believe or trust in this insurgency anymore..

2 Likes

Re: Nigerian Army Noticeably Absent In Town Taken From Boko Haram-new York Times by saintTim(m): 3:01pm On Mar 20, 2015
The Nigerian soldiers are doing their best they have liberated more than half of the terrorists occupied areas single handedly and the chadians talk too much not because the sacked BH from one town will not let America rest.


To the chadians do a clean job and be praised for it, America will not tell the Iraqi or Israeli army to occupy an area where the terrorists were chased out.


Infact this is an insult to the Nigerian army it just like eating food and calling UR wife to wash the plate. There by making the Nigerian soldiers space occupiers.




# God bless the Nigerian Army

7 Likes 1 Share

Re: Nigerian Army Noticeably Absent In Town Taken From Boko Haram-new York Times by Nobody: 3:01pm On Mar 20, 2015
Omashey o.

Like the yoruba proverb that says "the person we are fasting for who is eating lunch"

7 Likes

Re: Nigerian Army Noticeably Absent In Town Taken From Boko Haram-new York Times by EbolaParasite: 3:02pm On Mar 20, 2015
GenBuhari:
If it doesn't make sense it is because we are being deceived.

Boko Haram = Chadian troops

Nigerian corrupt government is in collusion with Chad and Boko Haram.

Why do you think that towns that are being captured by Chad are not being handed over to Nigeria?

Why do you think the residents of those towns are not being allowed to return.

Nigerians please wake up, Nigeria is being broken up and those territories under Chadian control will eventually be annexed by them.

Our government has accepted to deceptively allow the break up of Nigeria all in the name of pleasing their masters (America and Europe ) who are instructing them to allow the break up of Nigeria whilst keeping us Nigerians in the dark.

One day we would wake up to hear that Chad , Cameroon and Niger have decided to keep onto captured Nigerian territory and the UN has voted to allow them to annex those territories.

They began breaking up Nigeria when Thief Obasanjo (America's most loyal house slave) handed Bakassi over to Cameroon.

Can we see what is happening ?

Don't we even care?

I read this post and i already knew the author before looking at your username. You and your conspiracies sha

7 Likes

Re: Nigerian Army Noticeably Absent In Town Taken From Boko Haram-new York Times by dave2meek(m): 3:02pm On Mar 20, 2015
Who are we going to believe now
Re: Nigerian Army Noticeably Absent In Town Taken From Boko Haram-new York Times by Nobody: 3:03pm On Mar 20, 2015
So the FG has been lying to us? Way to go, GEJ.

15 Likes

Re: Nigerian Army Noticeably Absent In Town Taken From Boko Haram-new York Times by NotNairalandi(m): 3:04pm On Mar 20, 2015
Why you the tell us,if you see am you comot am...shekina grin
Re: Nigerian Army Noticeably Absent In Town Taken From Boko Haram-new York Times by OSFarinde(m): 3:04pm On Mar 20, 2015
E get as e be.. Anyway, front page thingz
Re: Nigerian Army Noticeably Absent In Town Taken From Boko Haram-new York Times by CR77(f): 3:05pm On Mar 20, 2015
speechless what can i say.
Re: Nigerian Army Noticeably Absent In Town Taken From Boko Haram-new York Times by OkikiOluwa1(m): 3:06pm On Mar 20, 2015
Wait
Re: Nigerian Army Noticeably Absent In Town Taken From Boko Haram-new York Times by totoakins(m): 3:06pm On Mar 20, 2015
if this doesn't make ppl vote out Jonathan I don't know what will

15 Likes

Re: Nigerian Army Noticeably Absent In Town Taken From Boko Haram-new York Times by mmsen: 3:07pm On Mar 20, 2015
If these towns were annexed by Chad or Niger would they be missed?
Re: Nigerian Army Noticeably Absent In Town Taken From Boko Haram-new York Times by KORLAR(m): 3:07pm On Mar 20, 2015
This government is the most 'unserious' government I know.

2 Likes

Re: Nigerian Army Noticeably Absent In Town Taken From Boko Haram-new York Times by ichidodo: 3:10pm On Mar 20, 2015
The frontline is vast in between which boko haram operates along pockets of safe zones..Like the Nigerian army, once you breakup a pocket you move to next pocket of resistance which could be hundreds of km away.You don't hold the ground when there isnt any immediate fear of resistance...Jes like the US Marine tactics of 'Island Hopping' in the WW2 pacific theatre once you finish off the japs of an island you hop to the next island instead of murking about with press men.These Tchad boys are just being mischievious, if you ask mi.

11 Likes 1 Share

Re: Nigerian Army Noticeably Absent In Town Taken From Boko Haram-new York Times by Alenkakent(m): 3:11pm On Mar 20, 2015
b4 nko



As I said earlier about the innovation from nairalanders to start up something bigger than jumia,kaymu,konga,olx and d likes...
among the start up member investors we have now, we need 2 lucky females to join the females we have so we can launch www.shopsonet.com soon to serve us all...

this is bigger and better than anything uve ever seen online in Nigeria...

to show ur interest, go to www.nairaland.com/2177653/import-export-market-bigest-africa and make ur interest known
Re: Nigerian Army Noticeably Absent In Town Taken From Boko Haram-new York Times by saharachic(f): 3:11pm On Mar 20, 2015
when boko haram have started retaken the towns again

(1) (2) (3) (4) (Reply)

Lawan Swears-In Abiru, Dickson, Two Other Senators / Lai Mohammed: Jonathan Behind My Arrest By Military / Buhari’s Govt Is Shameless For Talking About 2019 — Junaid Mohammed

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 35
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.