71 captives rescued as troops smash Boko Haram camps
Category: Boko Haram News
He said the military was overstretched by the time Boko aram insurgency reached its peak in the Northeast.
Source: The Nation
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Some of the rescued people...yesterday |
Skinny men and women. Frail
old people and ailing young boys and girls. They were all excited to be
free — thanks to troops who subdued two Boko Haram camps in Chuogori and
Shantumari, Borno State.
The seizure of the camps was spearheaded by troops from 21 Brigade and Nigerian Army Engineers.
In Kashingeri, Wale, Kushingari and
other camps, 151 Task Force Battalion troops rescued 71 civilians from
the terrorists’ camps.
Amid the success, the immediate past
Chief of Defence Staff, Air Chief Marshal Alex Badeh, yesterday listed
why the war had been tough.
He said:
- the military’s equipment was not enough;
- some fifth columnists in the military and other security agencies were leaking operational plans to the insurgents; and
- when the insurgency broke out in the Northeast, the military had been overstretched.
The Acting Director of Army Public
Relations, Col. Sani Kukasheka Usman, said troops dislodged insurgents
from two camps yesterday and rescued 59 from three others.
In a statement last night, Col. Usman
said: “As part of efforts to rid Nigeria of Boko Haram terrorists,
troops of 21 Brigade and elements of Nigerian Army Engineers yesterday
cleared a notorious terrorists’ camp at Chuogori and Shantumari, Borno
State.
“During the offensive operations, the fleeing terrorists left underground silos.
“In addition, troops of 151 Task Force
Battalion conducted operations on Kashingeri, Wale and Kushingari Boko
Haram terrorists camps today.
During the raids, quite a number of the terrorists were killed; a Landrover vehicle and a tipper were recovered.
“The troops also rescued 59 civilians that were held captive by the terrorists and cleared the camps.”
Some of the captives told The Associated Press that they were in the clutches of the extremists for as long as a year.
“I was waiting for death … they often
threatened to kill us,” said Yagana Kyari, a woman in her 20s, who said
she had been kidnapped from her village of Kawuri and taken to a
militant camp in Walimberi, about 40 kilometres (25 miles) southeast of
Maiduguri.
Kyari said they often went hungry because the extremists never provided enough food.
“Our gallant troops have rescued 59
civilians in two camps of the terrorist group,” army spokesman Col. I.T.
Gusau said. “Many of the terrorists were killed in the course of the
operations, but mop-up is still going on.”
The 59, all women and children except
for five elderly men, were freed on Thursday, he said. Another 12 women
and girls were rescued Wednesday from Kilakisa, 90 kilometres (55 miles)
southwest of Maiduguri, he said.
Air Chief Marshal Badeh was delivering his valedictory address at his Pulling-Out from the Nigerian Armed Forces.
He said: “Notwithstanding the modest
successes we recorded in the fight against terror, I must say that the
task of co-ordinating the military and other security agencies in the
fight against the insurgents is perhaps the most complex and challenging
assignment I have had in my over 38 years in service.
“For the first time, I was head of a
military that lacked the relevant equipment and motivation to fight an
enemy that was invisible and embedded with the local populace.
“Added to this was the exploitation of a
serious national security issue by a section of the press and the
political class to gain political mileage.
“Furthermore, the activities of fifth
columnists in the military and other security agencies who leaked
operational plans and other sensitive military information to the
terrorists, combined to make the fight against the insurgents
particularly difficult.
“The activities of these unpatriotic
members of the military not only blunted the effectiveness of the fight,
but also led to the needless deaths of numerous officers and men who
unwittingly fell into ambushes prepared by terrorists who had advance
warnings of the approach of such troops.
“The decision by certain countries to deny us weapons to prosecute the war also added to the challenges we faced.”
He said: “Over the years, the military
was neglected and underequipped to ensure the survival of certain
regimes, while other regimes, based on advice from some foreign nations,
deliberately reduced the size of the military and underfunded it.
“Unfortunately, our past leaders
accepted such recommendations without appreciating our peculiarities as a
third world military, which does not have the technological advantage
that could serve as force multipliers and compensate for reduced
strength.
“Accordingly, when faced with the crises
in the Northeast and other parts of the country, the military was
overstretched and had to embark on emergency recruitment and trainings,
which were not adequate to prepare troops for the kind of situation we
found ourselves in.
“It is important therefore for the
government to decide on the kind of military force it needs, by carrying
out a comprehensive review of the nation’s military force structure to
determine the size, capability and equipment holding required to
effectively defend the nation and provide needed security. This is based
on the fact that without security, there cannot be sustainable
development. The huge cost that would be required to rebuild the
Northeast and other trouble spots in the country could have been avoided
if the military had been adequately equipped and prepared to contain
the ongoing insurgency before it escalated to where it is today.”
Notwithstanding, Air Chief Marshal Badeh said his tenure witnessed many achievements.
He said: “Despite these challenges, I am
glad to note that a lot was achieved during our time in the fight
against terror. The achievements recorded are largely due to the
commitment, patriotism and fighting spirit of our men and women in
uniform who saw the fight against terror as a task that must be
accomplished no matter the odds and in spite of the campaign of calumny
against the military by a section of the media with their foreign
collaborators.
“The support of our teeming populace who have continued to stand behind their military has been quite encouraging.
“Also, our true friends who stood by us
in our time of need and provided us the weapons we are now using to
conduct the operations will always have a special place in our hearts.
“I must also mention the support and
co-operation we have continued to enjoy from our neighbouring countries,
which have enabled us to present a united front against a common enemy.
“The great support we have continued to
receive and the determination of our patriotic troops to defeat this
enemy of our nation has not only helped us to remain focused, but to
also embark on other projects for the armed forces.
Air Chief Marshal Badeh, however, said no nation could depend on other countries for its defence needs.
He asked Nigeria to look inward by building a defence industrial complex.
He added: “I want to state emphatically
that no nation can achieve its full security potentials by totally
depending on other nations for its defence needs. The lessons of the
civil war and the ongoing war against terror where certain countries
frustrated our attempts to procure much needed weapons are very
instructive.
“Again, as I have always said, when a
nation is at war, it is not the military alone that is at war, it is the
entire nation. Accordingly, every segment of society must see itself
contributing to the overall war effort by presenting a united front
against a common enemy.
“Therefore, I appeal to the relevant
agencies of government to mobilise the huge human and material resources
we have in this country towards the development of a vibrant Defence
Industrial Complex that would contribute to meeting our critical arms
and equipment needs. This is crucial if we must reduce our total
dependence on foreign sources of supply for critically needed arms.
“That is the only way we can retain our dignity as a nation in order to have freedom of action in international affairs.”
Air Chief Marshal Badeh, under whose tenure newspapers were confiscated, still criticised the press in his valedictory address.
He said: “A major challenge we faced
during my tenure was the negative media coverage of the activities of
the Armed Forces in the ongoing war against terror in the Northeast.
“We, therefore, resolved to have a
medium through which we can tell our own side of the story in an
objective and accurate manner. This gave birth to the establishment of
the Armed Forces Radio, broadcasting on 107.7 FM from the Mogadishu
Cantonment.
“Also, we were able to complete and commission the Armed Forces DNA Laboratory in Mogadishu Cantonment.”
Source: The Nation
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