■ Deserter reveals how leadership vacuum, internal squabble, hunger, desertion by members made Adamawa military exploit possible
Indications
abound that the Nigerian troops are getting upper hand against the Boko
Haram sect, following the continued noticeable frictions existing among
members of the gang and lack of clear, respectable chain of command
hitherto existing before the killing of its leader, Abubakar Shekau, a
source told Saturday Sun.
Saturday Sun authoritatively gathered
that recent breakthroughs by the Nigerian troops is also informed by the
demise of a prominent leader of the insurgents, after the death of
Abubakar Shekau at Konduga in Borno State. It is suggested that the
weakening of the sect also results from power tussle amongst those who
are jostling to lead the gang. The development, which our sources said,
has led to internecine squabble even among the rank and file in the Boko
Haram camp.
It will be recalled that, as a result of the
friction, which culminated in the fierce battle within their ranks and
the death of over 30 insurgents in the process, succession palaver, is
also said to have informed the new development. In the circumstances, it
would seem that things have begun to fall apart with the terror group.
Coupled
with all that is the apparent disenchantment by those that were
forcefully recruited. For example, there were hundreds that were
recruited in Michika and Madagali localities of Adamawa State. According
to one of them who deserted the group recently, they were mostly
natives who were used by the insurgents to identify houses of prominent
figures in government in the two localities and their environs.
Some
of the indigenes, who were rescued from captivity during an interaction
with Saturday Sun, maintained that the recent military breakthroughs
were made possible because the cohesion that once existed within the
group has begun to weaken and, therefore, the centre is beginning to
bottom out.
The recruited natives, who claimed that they were
hypnotized by the insurgents toward assisting in dishing out vital
information, took the advantage of these recent breakthroughs of the
troops to escape to Mubi and Yola, the state capital.
Aliu Dauda,
one of those that escaped, relayed his experience in the camp to
Saturday Sun. He said that many of them that were recruited were did not
join on their volition. According to him, they hypnotized, using
certain liquid substances.
“Most youths in Michika were
forcefully recruited to join the gang, first as subsidiary staff.
Failure to do their bidding attracted lashes or being shot in the leg or
confined in an underground detention camp.
“We served as
informants and any attempt to give out false information will be
punished severely. The fact remains that we were placed under a spell,
which made it possible for us to obey them. We discovered that we were
doing everything they told us without complaints.
“I thank God
that I survived and now in the midst of our kinsmen who have helped us
to recover from the after effect of our abduction,” Dauda enthused.
Adding,
he said: “Those that forcefully recruited us do not have human
feelings. While we were in their midst, we could not resist whatever
they told us because a liquid substance was given to us.”
When
asked how he was able to escape, he said that, “first and foremost,
there were disagreement and disenchantment between the rank and file of
the gang and our supposed leaders. Those of us that were newly recruited
five months ago, had to escape when it was apparent that Nigerian
troops were having an edge over the Boko Haram sect.
“At the
stage we were, we weren’t given arms and ammunitions but rather our
assignments were to give out information and identify locations and
targets for destruction. We had not graduated to that stage; those
recruited in Konduga and Gwoza were our seniors in the business of
killing. We that were forcefully recruited in Gulak, Madagali and
Michika, were considered not mature or trained to handle weapons or take
charge of ammunition.”
Dauda disclosed to Saturday Sun that
hunger and starvation in the camp of the gang immensely contributed to
the breakthroughs recorded by the Nigerian side. “As a result of hunger
and starvation, the gang allowed the newly recruited to search
everywhere for food. We were given this assignment because we are
familiar with the localities. We had no choice but to break into
people’s houses who are our kinsmen to get raw food. Besides, houses of
prominent persons in Michika were taken over by the sect.”
Army recovers more towns, arms and ammunition
In
recent times, Nigerian troops’ successes over the insurgents have
reverberated, especially with the capture of two armoured tanks
belonging to the sect. Apart from serious casualty figures recorded by
the group, the Nigerian military has also captured a massive armoury
with arms and ammunitions belonging to the fleeing terrorists.
“The
large quantities of weapons recovered in the raid are still being
evacuated from the scene of the night raid where several terrorists
died,” Major General Chris Olukolade, the defence spokesman said
recently. He added: “Similar operations took place in coordination with
the troops of Multinational Joint Task Force in the raids in other camps
located on the outskirts of Duguri, Polkime, Malafatori and other
locations around the fringes of Lake Chad.”
He also revealed that
substantial amounts of “money in different currencies and denominations
were recovered from the camps, while a total of seven terrorists were
captured in the operation.”
The statement also gave an update on
the foiled attack on Giwa Barrack in Maiduguri, Olukolade had said:
“Troops conducting cordon and search for remnants of the daring
terrorists who attacked Giwa Barracks in Maiduguri, had an encounter
with some of the surviving terrorists in the general area of Kayamla and
Alu Dam on the outskirts of Maiduguri this morning. More of the
terrorists have been killed and arrested in the ongoing encounters.
He
added that more bodies of fleeing terrorists had been discovered along
the routes of their escape. Troops’ morale and fighting spirit have been
further boosted by the outcome of the operations so far, he said,
adding that cordon-and-search as well as patrols and pursuit by air and
land were continuing in the entire mission area of Borno, Yobe and
Adamawa states.
Meanwhile, West African leaders have planned to
establish a multi-national force to counter the Boko Haram Takfiri
militants operating in the region. The decision was taken on Tuesday
during a summit attended by the presidents of Nigeria, Chad, Niger and
Benin and the foreign minister of Cameroon in Niger’s capital, Niamey.
Nigerien president, Mahamadou Issoufou, reportedly said after the
meeting, that the establishment of headquarters for the multi-national
force will be “accelerated to make it operational before the end of
November.” Battalions will be deployed to “our respective borders” in
the same time frame, Issoufou had added.
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