The Special Forces have arrested a top
intelligence operative of the Boko Haram sect. The suspect is believed
to have spearheaded the
abduction of the female students of Government
Secondary School, Chibok, on April 14, 2014, the Defence Headquarters
said in a statement on Monday.
The statement by the Director of Defence
Information, Maj. Gen. Chris Olukolade, named the Boko Haram operative
as Babuji Ya’ari, said to be a businessman and leader of a youth
vigilance group, popularly known as the Civilian JTF.
Olukolade said Ya’ari also spearheaded
the murder of the Emir of Gwoza, Idrissa Timta, who was killed by
insurgents at Tesan Alade, along the Biu-Garkida Road on May 30, 2014.
He said that Ya’ari used his membership of the Civilian JTF to gather information to aid the activities of the insurgents.
He said that the arrested Boko Haram spy
chief was responsible for the coordination of several devastating
attacks on military formations and the detonation of several bombs in
Maiduguri since 2011.
The statement read, “A terrorists’
intelligence cell headed by a businessman who participated actively in
the abduction of schoolgirls in Chibok has been busted by troops.
“The man, Babuji Ya’ari, who is also a
member of the Youth Vigilante Group, popularly known as Civilian JTF,
which he uses as cover while remaining an active terrorist, also
spearheaded the murder of the Emir of Gwoza.
“His main role in the group is to spy and gather information for the terrorist group.
“Babuji has been coordinating several
deadly attacks in Maiduguri since 2011, including the daring attacks on
Customs and military locations as well as the planting of IEDs in
several locations in the town.”
Olukolade said that the businessman gave
the information that led to the arrest of the female members of the
cell, including one Hafsat Bako, who was said to have escaped to Gombe
State to avoid being arrested but was tracked down by security agents.
The Defence Spokesman said that the
female Boko Haram member confessed to the coordination of payment for
insurgents on the payroll of Boko Haram.
According to him, Bako confessed that a
minimum of N10,000 was paid to each of the operatives, depending on the
weight of the task assigned to them.
Olukolade also said that the Special
Forces were holding another female member of the sect, Haj Kaka, said to
be an armourer and a spy for the group.
He said that the arrested terror suspect
actively operated a terrorists’ intelligence cell in collaboration with
others still at large.
The Defence Spokesman added that the
Special Forces had an encounter with some insurgents at Goniri, Yobe
State, and repelled them.
Although Olukolade did not give details of casualties, he said that the attack resulted in casualties on both sides.
Meanwhile, the death toll in the Sunday attacks on communities near Chibok, Borno State, rose on Monday to 53.
Suspected Boko Haram members had invaded
Kwada, Katagau and Kautikari villages, all in the Chibok Local
Government Area early on Sunday, setting churches ablaze and gunning
down worshippers.
Forty-eight people were confirmed dead
on Sunday night but reports from Chibok on Monday indicated that the
death toll had risen to 53 with some of the injured victims losing the
battle to stay alive.
Insurgents on April 14 had abducted well over 200 female pupils of the Government Secondary School in Chibok.
Two weeks ago, the insurgents wrote to the council officials and promised to launch another offensive on the community.
The PUNCH learnt on Monday that
residents of the affected communities were fleeing from their homes in
droves because they were afraid that the terrorists would come back.
“Residents are fleeing from neighbouring
villages into Chibok Local Government secretariat for fear of further
attacks from the insurgents,” Ishaya Ibrahim, a resident of one of the
affected villages near Chibok, said.
Ibrahim said residents of about 10
villages had decided to flee from their homes following the attacks on
Kwada, Katagau and Kautikari.
“I and the others fled to Chibok when we
heard rumours that they would come back and we don’t know the next
point of attack. Everybody is running to Chibok now. There is even no
more space for people to stay inside the local government secretariat;
people are now sleeping on mats under trees with their little children,”
he said.
Ibrahim, who spoke to one of our
correspondents on the telephone, claimed that the gunmen wore army
uniforms when they attacked a church in Kwada.
He said, “They brought out all the men
inside the church and started shooting them, while they chased after
anyone that tried to run away with a motorcycle. They also opened fire
on everybody in the town as they were running away.
“As of yesterday (Sunday), they killed
31 people inside a church and killed others outside. In the evening, we
found other dead bodies inside the bush. On Sunday, the soldiers refused
to go to the scene of the attack until after the insurgents had left
the place. There is no security presence in Chibok.”
Another indigene claimed that although
the military deployed men in five Hilux trucks after they were notified
of the attack, they were not able to stop the killings.
He said, “This is the most annoying
thing. Two kilometres from where the attack was going on, the military
just parked their vehicles under a tree and stayed there after they
heard the insurgents’ shooting. And when the fighter jet came, the
insurgents moved into people’s houses and stayed there. The jet hovered
over them for some time and didn’t see any movement. But instead of the
security agents to take advantage of that time and move in, and start
rescuing people, they didn’t and later turned back.
“So, we wonder what the Nigerian Army is
doing in Chibok. If our people call for us to arm ourselves, they would
say that we are criminals. Had it been a few members of our vigilante
groups were armed with AK-47 rifles, we believe they might have done
something better on Sunday in trying to save some people’s lives.”
Curiously, the Coordinator, National
Information Centre, Mike Omeri, said that the Federal Government was not
aware of the threat by Boko Haram that it would attack communities
around Chibok.
Omeri, who said this on Monday while
responding to questions on the preventive measures taken by security
operatives against the attacks on Kautikari, Kwada and Karagau villages,
denied knowledge of the threat by the violent sect to attack the
communities.
He said, “We are not aware of Boko Haram
threat letter to the communities. Boko Haram came to the villages, but
the security agencies mobilised during the attack and repelled them and
also killed a number of the insurgents.
“The insurgents are showing a lot of desperation, which means that they are nearing their end.”
Omeri denied that the push against
terrorism was being sabotaged. He said nobody was toying with the
campaign to contain the insurgents.
He stressed that the security forces had
all the necessary arms and ammunition as well as equipment and
resources they needed to combat the Boko Haram insurgency.
“Nobody is toying with the campaign against terrorism; all the systems have a way of checking themselves,” he added.
Omeri had during a press briefing by NIS
on June 18 said the armed forces and security services were not only
acting on letters but all possible leads and information available to
them.
He had said, “They are acting to ensure
that all of us, whether in Chibok or outside Chibok, are safe. The same
intensity of alertness, the same intensity of operation is also
established around the area to ensure that the threat is thwarted if
ever it exists.”
Source:Punch Newspaper
No comments:
Post a Comment