The Custodian April 14, 2014
Men believed to be members of the Boko Haram sect have again
invaded the Borno villages of Ngoshe and Kaigamari, in Gwoza and Konduga Local
Government Areas, respectively, killing 38 people.
The
insurgents also set ablaze several houses and shops in addition to destroying
mobile telecommunications masts in the area.
Ngoshe
is located east of hilly Gwoza town, between Cameroon border with Nigeria,
while Kaigamari is a remote settlement in Konduga, a town which has always been
under the siege of the Boko Haram terrorists.
Gwoza
is about 140 kilometres south, while Konduga is 40 kilometres drive from
Maiduguri, the state capital.
It
was gathered from a source that “the gunmen, armed with Improvised Explosive
Devices, petrol bombs, AK 47 rifles and rocket propelled grenades invaded
Ngoshe at about 10pm on Saturday and opened fire on the already sleeping and
unarmed residents, killing 30 of them and inflicting injuries on several
others, before setting ablaze some houses.”
Also
in Kaigamari, no fewer than eight people were said to have been killed on
Sunday when another set of gunmen attacked the village and torched some houses
and shops.
An
eyewitness, who said he was lucky to escape the attack in Ngoshe, Mallam Usman
Jidda, told journalists in Maiduguri that the gunmen who were sighted some few
days back in between the mountainous areas of Ngoshe and Limankara villages had
a field day killing and destroying houses without being challenged by security
operatives in the area.
“I
thank God for sparing my life and those of the members of my family as we were
able to escape the attack, we are now settling with one of my relatives in
Gwoza council area. I can confirm to you that more than 30 people were killed
by the insurgents in Ngoshe, apart from the destruction of property worth
millions of naira,” Jidda stated.
The
attack in Kaigamari village near the state capital was said to have forced
surviving residents to flee the area to Maiduguri on Sunday.
The
insurgents were also said to have attacked Hamsa in Gwoza Hills in Borno State.
Investigations
revealed that the attackers came to the besieged area through Kwatara and
encamped against the community at Tate.
The
source said that the “operation started around 5pm on Saturday and lasted all
through the night.”
Although,
the source could not give the casualty figure in the latest attacks, it was
stated that a relative of the leader of the Church of Christ in Nations in the
area was among the dead.
But
the Director of Defence Information, Maj.-Gen. Chris Olukolade, said on the
telephone on Sunday that the operation to flush out the insurgents in the Gwoza
hills was still ongoing.
He
stated that the area was very vast as it extends to Adamawa State and Cameroon.
He
said, “The operation to flush out the insurgents is still going on; that
place is very vast, the Special Forces have taken over a part of the hill; you
know that it extends to Adamawa and, Cameroon…”
However,
Olukolade said in a statement on Sunday that several makeshift insurgents’
camps in the forest and mountains had been dislodged in ongoing ground and
aerial bombardments
He
stated that the security forces had noted the “presence of unarmed members of
terrorist groups in some villages.”
He
said that the Special Forces had been directed to ensure aggressive patrol of
local communities to complement the ongoing assault on the insurgents.
Meanwhile,
the Sultan of Sokoto and President General of the Jama’atu Nasril Islam, Alhaji
Sa’ad Abubakar lll, lamented on Sunday that the killings in the country under
the guise of insurgency was spreading at an alarming rate.
The
sultan, who spoke at the 50th Anniversary Lecture of the JNI in Kaduna on
Sunday, asked the Federal Government to curb the ugly development.
He
said, “We have discussed with government on the National Conference and how to
make it a success. We don’t want another jamboree, we have been giving advice
to our leaders it is left for them to take the advice or jettison them.
“Everyday
we hear of people killed in different parts of the country. It is a nightmare
that is spreading to parts of the country in the name of cattle rustling. We
are worried about the Muslims, Christians and Fulani being killed because life
is sacred.
“Why
are we fighting one another in the name of ethnicity and religion; we should
all go about our religion peacefully. Our non-Muslim brothers should join us to
look at problems bedeviling the country and find solutions,” he said.
The
Vice President, Namadi Sambo, assured that the Federal Government was doing all
it could to arrest the ugly trend.
Sambo
promised that the perceived imbalance raised by the Sultan would be addressed,
noting that the government would ensure fairness and equity in all its dealings
with Nigerians irrespective of religion.
Meanwhile,
the Commissioner of Police in Borno State, Alhaji Lawal Tanko, said no
candidate for the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination on Saturday was
killed in the state.
Tanko
was reacting to an online report that 200 candidates were killed in one of the
centres in Maiduguri by suspected Boko Haram insurgents.
He
told the News Agency of
Nigeria that “I was directly
in charge of the police operations to ensure safety of the candidates in all
the examination venues in Maiduguri.”

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