The leader of the Boko Haram Islamic
sect, Sheikh Abubakar Shekau, is said to have been cornered by operatives of
the Joint Task Force in Gwoza hills, Borno State...
Sources stated, “We are combing Gwoza hills where we believe Shekau is hiding.”JTF sources
The source added that a unit of the
Army’s Special Forces team had launched a “well-coordinated assault” on a
group of insurgents somewhere in the Gwoza hills areas on June 26,
2013. Shekau, the source added, was in the group of Islamists, with some
of his closest aides.
He added that the operation ran into
“hitches” and in the ensuing gun battle some of the insurgents and
members of the Special Forces group lost their lives.
Another military source said that one of the army casualties was one of the country’s best Special
Forces officer, Major A.T. Fambiya, who had volunteered to lead the
operation.
A source said five soldiers were also gunned down by the insurgents during the encounter.
Fambiya, who hailed from Gwoza Local
Government Area of Borno State, had reportedly volunteered for the
mission because of his excellent knowledge of the area.
The source said the military authorities
had accepted Fambiya’s offer because he had grown up in the area and he
understood the area’s rocky terrain.
Fambiya, who was on posting to the 322
Artillery Regiment in Benin City, Edo State, was redeployed to the JTF
on June 13, 2013, a few weeks into his deployment to the JTF’s Operation
Boyona.
The secrecy surrounding the operation
made the next of kin to the Major, a pastor, Iliya Joshua, to call on
the Federal Government to investigate the cause of the death of his
brother.
“We call on the Federal Government to
investigate the rumoured cause of the death of the officers since it
remains a mystery to our family,” he said, without giving any
explanation about what he meant by “rumoured death”.
He said that the late major was supposed
to be undergoing training at the Nigerian Army School of Artillery,
Kantagora, Niger State.
He said, “I made the call because he was
supposed to be at the Army school of artillery. The last time I called
him, he said that he was not part of those people that were going to
Maiduguri for this operation.
“But later, I was told that he had been killed. He was not supposed to be on posting to that place.”
When our correspondent contacted the
Director of Defence Information, Brig. Gen Chris Olukolade, he said that
the mandate of the JTF was to look for all insurgents and not just the
leader of the Boko Haram sect.
“We know that we are combing everywhere
for every insurgent. The pursuit of the insurgents is continuing. That
is the mandate at the moment,” he said.
President Goodluck Jonathan had told the
CNN a few days ago that the Boko Haram threat would be overcome by
security operatives in the country.
He said that the Federal Government was
neither negotiating nor begging the Islamic militants as steps were
being taken to deal decisively with the scourge.
He had said, “We are not negotiating with Boko Haram. It is done all over the world. It is not negotiation. We are not begging.
“Our security architecture was first
designed to deal with ordinary criminals but since terror started, we
have been building it. I believe if you are to interview me again in
three months’ time, you will praise me that this government has tried.
“We are tackling terror from various
angles. We must first of all stop them through military intervention,
which we have initiated by declaring a state of emergency in three
states where these terror attacks are predominant.”
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