As different groups and politicians endorse President
Goodluck
Jonathan for a second term in Abuja, reports have it that Maiha
town, the administrative headquarters of Maiha Local Government Area of
Adamawa State, has been overrun by Boko Haram insurgents.
Maiha
is about 25 kilometres from Mubi, the commercial town captured by the
insurgents in Adamawa last week. Maiha is also about 200km from Yola,
the state capital.
Even before the town fell to the
insurgents, it was already a shadow of itself as commercial and social
activities were paralyzed. People were already leaving the town due to
its proximity to Mubi.
Fleeing residents said they saw
many soldiers running away from the area with some of them hitch-hiking
in residents’ vehicles. The soldiers told the residents that if the
insurgents caught up with them, it would lead to instant death.
“The
insurgents started trooping into the town around 2:30 p.m. and engaged
troops stationed at Kosha before advancing to the main town of Maiha,” a
fleeing resident, Kabir Musa, said in a telephone interview. “The
soldiers, who advanced to the area in their bid to recapture Mubi,
started running away as the insurgents overran the entire town.”
Another
resident of the town, Garba Baba, said some fleeing soldiers begged him
to assist them with civilian clothes so they would not be traced by the
insurgents. The soldiers, he said, even threw their guns into the bush.
“The
fleeing soldiers asked us to give them our clothes so that they can
camouflage and escape from the area safely as some of them discarded
their weapons in the bush. A lot of the discarded weapons are currently
lying in the bush,” Mr. Baba, who also fled Maiha, said.
He
said in a similar situation to when the insurgents captured Mubi, they
did not encounter any challenge from the Nigerian troops.
“The
insurgents did not encounter any challenge as they stormed the town in
APC’s and Toyota Hilux vans firing shots into the soldiers’ directions
chanting Allahu Akbar,” Mr. Baba said. “The Boko Haram insurgents had
ordered us not to run, saying that they are not after civilians but
soldiers and other security people.”
Another resident
still trapped in Maiha, Dauda Mallam, said, “Many of the residents fled
into the bush, particularly soldiers. Some of them may have been killed
by bullets.
“The insurgents also hoisted their flags in strategic places in the town.”
A
soldier of the 23rd Armoured Brigade, Yola, also told PREMIUM TIMES
that “we just heard that the insurgents had attacked our men in their
base near Maiha town, and some soldiers were killed in a gun battle. We
are yet to get full details.”
The military is yet to
officially react to the Maiha takeover in Adamawa, which like Borno and
Yobe, has been under a state of emergency since last year. The emergency
rule has not deterred insurgents from carrying out terrorist activities
leading to the death of thousands of people.
Several soldiers including senior officers are currently being investigated and disciplined for fleeing battles with insurgents.
On
Monday, the Nigerian government, apparently frustrated by its inability
to check the Boko Haram insurgency, accused the U.S. of not doing
enough to assist the country.
Nigeria’s Ambassador to
the United States, Ade Adefuye, expressed the government’s view when he
received a delegation of the U.S. Council on Foreign Relations.
“I
am sad to inform you that the Nigerian leadership: military and
political, and even the general populace, are not satisfied with the
scope, nature and content of the United States’ support for us in our
struggle against terrorists,” Mr. Adefuye said.
“We
find it difficult to understand how and why in spite of the U.S.
presence in Nigeria with their sophisticated military technology, Boko
Haram should be expanding and becoming more deadly.
Source:PM News
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