A Nigerian soldier currently serving in Borno state has alleged that
members of the Boko Haram attacked Gamboru Ngala in their presence but
that their commander instructed them not to repel the insurgents.
The
soldier who did not want to be named told the BBC Hausa Service that
apart from foot soldiers, choppers were seen hovering in the air while
the attacks were ongoing, but no assistance was rendered to the people.
Gamboru
Ngala, a neighbouring community in the Nigeria-Cameroon border was
attacked on May 5 where over 300 people were killed with many houses and
a market completely razed down.
The soldier said: “What I saw the
day the attack took place really surprised me. Not only me, even my
other colleagues were surprised, and we were all afraid. We entered
Gamboru Ngala town few minutes to 5pm, we heard loud sounds and saw
thick smokes from around the Gamboru market.
“We then realized
that it was the market that was set ablaze. As we got to our camp at
Gamboru, before our commander went to his office, he told the soldiers
that nobody should dare go close to the town.
“He further said
an all-round defence be deployed to guard our camp. But even when we
were coming, we saw that soldiers with armoured tanks and all the
weapons, police and members of Civilian JTF had already surrounded our
camp,” he said.
The soldier said “Instead of him to direct us to
go and face the insurgents, since we’re soldiers who know how to attack
them, and the Civilian JTF are from the town who know where we would
follow to enter the town so that the insurgents would not see us,” that
was not done.
Asked if he suspected any foul play, the soldier
said: “Exactly, we thought it was a set up. If he had allowed us to go
into Gamboru town, I’m sure no member of Boko Haram would have escaped
that day, because we soldiers were more than 200, and the Civilian JTF
told us that only about 50 of the insurgents had guns. But we were
shocked when our CO asked us not to go.”
The soldier also said
that the Boko Haram insurgency could only be tackled if their “superiors
remove their hands from the matter.”
“If our superiors don’t
remove their hands from this issue, I can assure you the Boko Haram
insurgency would not be tackled. We saw a chopper right at the point the
insurgents were operating giving them cover.
“We learnt those in
the chopper were instructed to attack the armoured tank brought by the
insurgents, but that was not done. If they didn’t allow us to face the
insurgents, why didn’t the chopper attack? That is where you’ll see
complicity clearly,” he added.
However, chairman of the National
Information Centre on security and Director-General of the National
Orientation Agency, Mike Omeri, said the allegations were baseless.
“You
know Nigerian soldiers are experts; they know what they’re doing. If
they ever get such information, they immediately swing into action and
do the right thing.
“We heard about the incident of Gamboru Ngala
that soldiers were initially told about the attack. But we later
discovered it wasn’t true. I am sure whatever comes to our soldiers,
they investigate to see what it is and tackle it,” he said.
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