President Muhammadu Buhari on Monday ordered the Chief of Defence
Staff and the Inspector- General of police to dismantle all
military
check points nationwide.
The order was handed down to the Defence
Chiefs when the President had a meeting with officials of the Ministry
of Defence at the State House.
The Permanent Secretary, Ministry
of Defence, Malam Aliyu Ismail, said this when he briefed State House
Correspondents on the outcome of the meeting with the president.
“The
President has instructed the Chief of Defence Staff to get the Chief of
Army Staff and the Inspector General of Police to remove all the
military men along the roads across the country,” he said.
Ismail
said the officials came to brief the President on arrangements made so
far in the implementation of decisions reached during the Lake Chad
Basin Commission.
“Nigerian armed forces are very ready, we have
briefed him but one most interesting thing about it is that we are going
out much happier because he has shown us he is still a soldier.
“He has updated and enriched our strategic plan and we are happy,” he added.
He
said that the meeting also discussed the relocation of the military
command centre in Nigeria to Borno, adding that the centre would soon be
fully operational.
“We have briefed him on how far we have
reached on that; on that one again he has given us some additional
assignments but very soon the centre will be on.
“I want to assure
Nigerians that with what we have come out from this meeting we are very
enthusiastic that the issue of Boko Haram will soon be over.
“I,
as a permanent secretary, also feel like going to fight the war because
he has given us hope and we have seen peace and security in the very
near future,” he said.
The permanent secretary also said that the
Joint Multi National Task Force on Boko Haram had restrategised to
combat terrorism in the sub-region.
“Now we have come as a united front.
“We have Chad, we have Cameroon; we have Benin; we have Niger.
“We
have all restrategised and come out with one strategy that we are going
to use to address Boko Haram, unlike before,” he said.
The permanent secretary, however, said the issue of the abducted Chibok Girls was not part of the discussion.
Source: PM News
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