Nigerian Intelligence Authorities have uncovered a plan by Boko Haram to attack in Lagos State details below!!!
AN alleged plot by the terrorist group, Boko Haram, to invade
Lagos in vehicles painted with military colours has been uncovered by
security operatives. The Guardian learnt at the weekend from
military authorities that the group planned to attack Lagos with weapons
in vehicles used by senior military officers painted with the colours
of the Army, Navy or Air Force.
This intelligence has made
military authorities to order soldiers and naval ratings to thoroughly
search vehicles painted with military colours, including those belonging
to generals.
A source said: “No officer’s car painted with military colours is left out in this regard.”
Some months ago, a terrorist group allegedly conveyed weapons to Lagos
inside some of the numerous fuel
tankers that ply major roads to the
country’s former capital and indeed the nation’s commercial nerve
centre.
It was learnt then that indeed the federal and Lagos
authorities were quite startled that the masterminds of the planned
terror act could pile up weapons of mass destruction in the state,
generally considered the safest haven for investment at the moment in
the country.
The state authorities, including the governor, were
shown the illegal arms that the security and intelligence community’s
inter-agency co-operation confiscated. “They were shocked, really
shocked when they were shown the level of organisational capacity of the
evil ones that planned to attack Lagos…” a top source disclosed then.
A two-week raid carried out some months ago by a Joint Task Force led
by operatives of the Nigerian Army and State Security Service (SSS)
saved residents in Lagos and Ogun states from possible attacks by the
terrorists.
The joint raid had led to the arrest of 42 members
of the dreaded Boko Haram who were dislodged from the North-East by
military purge carried out under emergency rule in Adamawa, Borno and
Yobe states and had migrated to Lagos and Ogun states to regroup and
plant terrorist cells.
The suspects were rounded up through
intelligence information by one of the supposed Boko Haram members
stationed in Lagos, who unknown to the suspects, was actually planted
and had their telephone numbers tracked by the military operatives.
Based on intelligence reports, the suspects were ‘smoked’ out from
Ibafo and Ileke new trailer garage in Ogun State, Mafoluku, Alaba,
Ijora-Badia, Aviation Quarters in Mafoluku-Oshodi, Ketu and Mile Two
motor parks, Orile trailer park, Lekki new extension and Bar Beach in
Victoria Island.
The JTF had a few months ago uncovered and
dismantled the plot by the alleged terrorists to plant cells in the
western part of the country with Lagos as the headquarters.
Security operatives that briefed the National Assembly leaders last year
about the reality of the planned invasion of Lagos reportedly told the
federal legislators that indeed the attackers had planned to cripple the
economy.
Former Head of State, the late Gen. Murtala Muhammed,
had in 1976 recognised the strategic importance of Lagos even while he
was announcing the creation of the country’s new capital, Abuja, then.
His words in a national broadcast to the nation on January 3, 1976:
“…Lagos will, in the foreseeable future, remain the nation’s commercial
capital and one of its nerve centres. But in terms of servicing the
present infrastructure alone, the committed amount of money and effort
required will be such that Lagos State will not be ready to cope.
“It will even be unfair to expect the state to bear this heavy burden
on its own. It is therefore necessary for the Federal Government to
continue to sustain the substantial investment in the area. The port
facilities and other economic activities in the Lagos area have to be
expanded.
“There is need in the circumstances for the Federal
Government to maintain a special defence and security arrangement in
Lagos which will henceforth be designated a special area. These
arrangements will be carefully worked out and written into the new
constitution. Kaduna and Port Harcourt are to be accorded similar status
and designated as Special Areas…”
It was learnt that the
security chiefs told the federal legislators and their presiding
officers that some of the attackers captured had hinted that the plot
was deliberate: to cripple the nerve centre of the country’s commerce
and industry, (a city that hosts the international air and sea ports) so
that the nation’s economy could collapse.
It was said that the
insurgents had reasoned that since they had successfully crippled
business operations in the North, there should be federal character in
the spread of the destruction, as even the South-East and South-South
geo-political zones too have been negatively affected by the insurgency
and kidnapping. The federal legislators were said to have been alarmed
by a revelation about the sense of urgency of the insurgents to hit
Lagos “just to make Nigeria ungovernable for the present
administration.”
The Guardian was told that the implications of
targeting the very strategic Lagos Third Mainland Bridge have been
worrisome to authorities at all levels. This is part of the reasons for
the concerns in Abuja and Lagos.
The Third Mainland Bridge is
the longest of the three bridges connecting Lagos Island to the
Mainland. The other two are the Eko and Carter Bridges. It is the
longest bridge in Africa. The Third Mainland Bridge is a vital artery of
the network of federal highways and commands high patronage in Lagos
Municipal Area, as it connects two of the Lagos State’s commercial hubs,
Victoria Island and Ikeja.
The bridge, which has about 350,000
daily users, is also a vital link to Lekki, Ajah and Epe communities.
Midway through the bridge, there is a link to Herbert Macaulay Way,
Yaba. The bridge starts really from Oworonsoki, which is linked to the
Oshodi–Apapa Expressway and Lagos-Ibadan Expressway, and ends at the
Adeniji Adele Interchange on Lagos Island. Built by Julius Berger
Nigeria Plc, the bridge was commissioned by former Military President
Ibrahim Babangida in 1990 and it measures about 11.8 km in length.
The bridge posts huge economic relevance to the country as it saves
commuters who shuttle between two of the state’s commercial hubs,
Victoria Island and Ikeja, a lot of man-hours. It was said that the last
repair of the important bridge cost the nation N1.055 billion.
It is feared that if Lagos Third Mainland Bridge is destroyed, Lagos and
indeed Nigeria, are destroyed. It was estimated that the cache of arms
seized from the insurgents when it was reported that Boko Haram entered
Lagos was capable of wreaking havoc on the vital bridge in the heart of
Lagos.
Source: ngrguardiannews.com
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