Nigerian Army records more victory over Boko Haram Insurgents, raids Borno and Adamawa killing many Boko Haram members
The Director of
Defence Information, Maj. Gen. Chris Olukolade, has said some Boko Haram insurgents
were killed by troops during a cordon and search operation along
Djimillo-Damaturu, Yobe State on Friday.
Olukolade said the
troops had a fierce encounter with the terrorists when their hideout was
discovered by soldiers near a market.
According to him
the soldiers killed an unspecified number of the insurgents and recovered some
machine guns and rifles from them.
He added that some
of the terrorists were believed to have been killed in a fire that gutted the
house which they used as their base.
Olukolade said a
soldier was killed in the fight with the terrorists while another who had
gunshot wounds was undergoing treatment
The Defence
spokesman also said the troops had an encounter with some terrorists who were
in the process of blowing up a bridge to halt the military operation in Gulak,
the headquarters of the Madagali Local Government Area of Adamawa State.
The troops, he
said, also recovered some arms and ammunition from them, adding that flags
hoisted by the terrorists were being dismantled by the troops in the
operational area.
Meanwhile, an
intelligence source said on Saturday that military operations were going on in
various communities in the three states under emergency rule.
The source stated
that the military had recovered over 30 communities in 12 local government
areas in Adamawa, Borno and Yobe states.
Olukolade had said
in a statement on Friday that troops liberated Bara, the headquarters of Gulani
Local Government area of Yobe and Gulak, the headquarters of the Madagali.
He stated also
that the troops also recaptured other towns such as Shikah, Fikayel, Tetebah,
Buza, Kamla and Bumsa, during the two-day operation.
In a related
development, a former United States ambassador to Nigeria, Mr. John Campbell,
has said Boko Haram’s loss of some of its captured territories to the Nigerian
troops will not prevent it from carrying out violent attacks against government
facilities and innocent people.
Though the
Islamist insurgents still have swaths of lands in the North-East under their
control, the Nigerian military has been able to drive out the terrorists from
more than 10 communities including Mubi, Gamboru-Ngala, Hong, Monguno, Baga and
Gombi.
Campbell made this
known in an article he wrote for the US-based Council on Foreign Relations.
Addressing a news
conference in Abuja on Thursday, the Director General of the National
Information Centre, Mr. Mike Omeri, had said the army was in full control of
the recovered territories in Borno and Adamawa states.
But according to
Campbell, beyond the recovered territories, “there appears to have been little
change in the areas where Boko Haram operates.
“What is the
significance of the Nigerian military’s reoccupation of the three towns? Towns
in North-East Nigeria appear to change hands frequently. Unlike ISIS in Syria
and Iraq, where a major goal is the permanent occupation and governance of
territory, Boko Haram appears to be highly fluid. Hence, Boko Haram does not
need to hold territory to be effective. Boko Haram is also adept at melting
back into the countryside when confronted by superior forces.”
In a related
development, the US Senate voted unanimously to condemn the vicious attacks
perpetrated by Boko Haram against innocent civilians, especially women and
children, and called on President Goodluck Jonathan’s administration to ensure
that Nigeria’s upcoming general elections on March 28 and April 11 are safe,
credible, and transparent.
The resolution was
introduced by Senator Robert Menendez.
The US Senate
stated its support to bring an end to violence perpetrated by the Islamist
insurgents, urging the Nigerian government to conduct transparent, peaceful,
and credible elections.
Nigerian Army records more victory over Boko Haram Insurgents, raids Borno and Adamawa killing many Boko Haram members
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Sunday, March 01, 2015
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