Military chiefs aiding B’Haram, soldier alleges

Chief of Army Staff, Lt.-Gen. Kenneth Minimah
    Chief of Army Staff, Lt.-Gen. Kenneth Minimah


A soldier has claimed that he witnessed incidents that suggested some military   chiefs work  with Boko Haram insurgents in the North-East.
The soldier told the Voice of America Hausa Service  how his military unit in Borno State was ambushed by Boko Haram members.
He  said the commander of a nearby military unit in Bama recently sought assistance from his unit in carrying out a raid.
The soldier, who did not give his  name, said when the two military units joined up, they were given different uniforms. The Bama unit commander, according to him, gave his own troops green uniforms while his   unit received tan “desert camouflage” uniforms.
When the troops reached the battle area, the soldier said the commander of the better-equipped Bama unit suddenly withdrew his forces, leaving the remaining troops to fend for themselves against Boko Haram fighters.
Speaking in Hausa, he said, “We had only light arms and our men were being picked off one after the other.”
The soldier also said he recognised some of the Boko Haram fighters as his former military trainers in Kontagora, a town near Abuja.
“We realised that some of them were actually mercenaries from the Nigerian army… hired to fight us,” he said.
The soldier also claimed that many of his colleagues were deserting   the army because of their frustrations with what he said was the politicisation of the fight against the militants.
He said, “I swear by Allah, there are soldiers who are coming out of the forest after they were abandoned; several of them dropped their weapons and just went home.
“There were more than 20 of them from this battalion in Kwanduga. Even me that is talking to you now, I am preparing to leave. I just want to tell the world so that they will know what is happening. These people are doing this secretly.”
He also claimed that  there was a deliberate attempt to further impoverish the North preparatory to the 2015  general elections.
•10,000 soldiers not in Maiduguri
The soldier dismissed claims that there were up to 10,000 troops in Maiduguri.
The soldier added,   “I swear, even now, there are boys in the forest where we are coming out from.
“They (Army) keep saying they are sending soldiers, it’s a lie. They claim that there are 10,000 soldiers in Maiduguri but  it is a lie. If we have 10,000 soldiers, Boko Haram would have ended.  How  many members does Boko Haram have?”
When one of our correspondents contacted the Director of Defence Information, Maj.Gen Chris Olukolade,  he said he did not believe that the person who granted the interview to VOA was a soldier of the Nigerian Army.
He said that the person claiming to be a soldier could be an insurgent trying to create a false impression to promote the activities of Boko Haram.
The  defence  spokesman  said, “The person that granted that interview on the VOA; we believe he is not a soldier, he could just be one of those simulated on the other side to give some false impression to support the insurgents.”
•Soldier fighting for B’Haram killed
But the soldier’s claim seemed to have been corroborated as a lance corporal has been killed by the Special Forces during an  encounter with  insurgents in Borno State.
It was learnt on Sunday that the military high command was investigating  soldiers  suspected to be involved in  conducts that could compromise national security.
The lance corporal was  said to have been killed  while assisting in  the  training of Boko Haram fighters.
Investigations revealed that the soldier was ‘competent’ and trusted enough to be a trainer of Special Forces at the Nigerian Army Training Centre, Kontagora.
It was learnt that one of the soldiers who took part in the operation recognised the body of the lance corporal  who   dressed in military camouflage.
The soldier  was said to have called the attention of his commander to his discovery that one of the corpses   was that of a soldier well known to him as a trainer of special forces in Kotangora.
It was learnt that the commander ordered a search on the body of the  lance corporal  and   a current pass permitting  him  to leave his location at the   training centre in  Kontagora was found on him.
A security source said, “A  soldier who trains Special Forces at the Nigerian Army Training Centre in Kontagora, Niger State, was among those who were killed.
“The man was not among the Special Forces; he was obviously leading the attack for the insurgents but he got killed.
“It was one of the soldiers that identified him as somebody from  his unit in Kotangora.
“The soldier called attention to the man’s corpse and when the commander said he should be searched, they recovered a current pass authorising him to leave Kotangora and his Army identity card from him.”
However, Olukolade said that he would not want to comment on the  killing  of the  lance corporal.
He stated   that the military had zero tolerance for people fighting on the side of the insurgents.
Meanwhile the  death toll in Saturday’s attack  on Yar-Galadima in Maru Local Government Area of Zamfara State   has risen    to 105.
The Emir of Dansadau, Alhaji Husseini Adamu  made this known on Sunday at the emirate council.
The herdsmen who wore camouflage   uniform were said to have stormed a special security meeting  of vigilante members  in the community.
It was gathered that they  arrived the village in  more than  100  motorcycles  and operated for over three hours without any response from  the police and other security forces.
A source said in the village said, “The gunmen  overpowered the vigilante  members. They used    knives  to slaughter some  and shot others.
“As  I speak  with you  over 100 dead bodies were recovered   and  I believe  some would be found in nearby  bushes.”
About  40 of the victims were also  buried on Sunday. Their burial, according to   eyewitness took place at about 4pm.
Among those  who attended the burial were the state   Governor, Abdullaziz Yari;  his deputy Ibrahim Wakkala; the  Assistant  Inspector-General of Police, Zone 10, Alhaji Mamman Sule;  and the state Police Commissioner, Alhaji Ibrahim Bichi.
At the burial, the governor condemned  the attack on the villagers, saying those behind  it  would not go unpunished.
Although he noted that the security meeting of the vigilante group was  held illegally,Yari vowed that anybody  or group linked  with the  murder of “these innocent people will face  the music.”
Yari wondered how the killings    happened in broad daylight without any help from  security forces.


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