Members of two
chapters of the civilian Joint Task Force (JTF), which helps Nigerian
soldiers in the war against the Islamist terrorist group, Boko Haram,
are offering conflicting accounts about whether Boko Haram had captured
Bama, a major town in the state that was the scene of fierce gunfight
two days ago.
Residents who fled the town as well as Senator Khalifa Zanna, who
hails from the town, have asserted that the Islamist insurgents took
Bama after Nigerian soldiers retreated en masse following a major case
of death by friendly fire. Continue...
However, just as reports emerged that Boko Haram had overrun Bama,
the state government stepped up propaganda to deny that insurgents had
gained the upper hand in such a strategically important town.
Yesterday, the Borno State government helped arrange a widely
orchestrated press conference for leaders of the Maiduguri-based youth
vigilantes, also known as “civilian” Joint Task Force (JTF), to deny
reports that Boko Haram militants had seized Bama from Nigeria troops.
At the press briefing, held in Maiduguri, the Borno State capital,
the “civilians” JTF’s spokesman, Jibrin Gunda, said his group
categorically refuted the statement credited to Senator Zanna, who
represents Borno Central, that Boko Haram had captured Bama. Mr. Zanna
made the assertion in an interview with the Hausa service of the British
Broadcasting Corporation (BBC).
Mr. Gunda said, “Our security personnel are doing their best.
Yesterday, our gallant soldiers successfully repelled the terrorists who
attacked Bama. And Bama as a town in Borno State has never been overrun
or overtaken by the militants even for a minute. Even now, our soldiers
are in full control of the town.” He urged President Goodluck Jonathan
to investigate and prosecute the alleged sponsors of Boko recently named
by an Australian hostage negotiator, Steven Davis. “Nigeria is superior
and better than any person in this country,” said Mr. Gunda.
It was unclear why the Nigerian military left the business of
presenting their case about Bama to the “civilian” JTF, but the Nigerian
military appeared tongue-tied about the status of Bama.
Even as members of the Maiduguri-based civilian JTF were insisting at
their press conference that Bama was still in the hands of soldiers,
their colleagues from Bama had arrived in Maiduguri after escaping from
the advancing column of Boko Haram insurgents. In separate interviews
with SaharaReporters, some of Bama’s top civilian JTF leaders declared
that Bama had indeed fallen to Boko Haram. They also offered a starkly
different account from the rosy picture painted by the state government
in Maiduguri regarding the outcome of the battle for control of Bama.
One of the Bama leaders said he found it hard to understand why their colleagues in Maiduguri were lying to the press about the status of Bama. He told SaharaReporters that he had fled Bama along with many soldiers to Maiduguri. “I even used my car more than fifteen times to drive soldiers from Konduga to Maiduguri,” he said.
One of the Bama leaders said he found it hard to understand why their colleagues in Maiduguri were lying to the press about the status of Bama. He told SaharaReporters that he had fled Bama along with many soldiers to Maiduguri. “I even used my car more than fifteen times to drive soldiers from Konduga to Maiduguri,” he said.
A top-level source disclosed that the Borno State government was
behind the effort to calm frayed nerves in Maiduguri as rumors spread
that Boko Haram might attack the capital city.
Deputy Governor Umar Zanna of Borno later called his own press
conference and described the attack on Bama as unfortunate. Even so, he
assured the people of the state that the government was on top of the
situation. He added that refugees at camps were being taken care of, and
commended Nigerian security forces for engaging the militants in a
fierce battle. He disclosed that more than three thousands displaced
people from Bama and Konduga were now in Maiduguri.
Contradicting the deputy governor, two soldiers who fled Bama told
SaharaReporters that the town remained in the hands of Boko Haram. One
of them stated that a few soldiers had set up a roadblock in Konduga.
SaharaReporters had reported yesterday that Bama fell after an Air Force jet deployed to fight the insurgents made a costly error of bombing the army barracks in Bama, inflicting heavy casualties on the soldiers and causing disarray among the survivors. Most of the surviving soldiers fled as Boko Haram insurgents rode into town.
SaharaReporters had reported yesterday that Bama fell after an Air Force jet deployed to fight the insurgents made a costly error of bombing the army barracks in Bama, inflicting heavy casualties on the soldiers and causing disarray among the survivors. Most of the surviving soldiers fled as Boko Haram insurgents rode into town.
Some fleeing civilian residents said the Islamist sect had began a
house-to-house sweep, capturing and killing adult males suspected to be
members of the civilian vigilante group that had resisted the terrorist
onslaught.
Thousands of civilians had fled their homes and trekked from Bama to
Konduga, adding that some slept in the bush before they arrived in
Maiduguri yesterday. One such Bama resident, Modu Bura, said he and
three of his children were part of the group that made the perilous
escape.
In an interview with SaharaReporters early today, Senator Zanna
reiterated that the militants were firmly in control of Bama. He said
they had killed two of his nephews earlier yesterday, adding that the
insurgents also killed the son of a prominent Bama-based businessman,
Hamza Mbusube, yesterday 20 kilometers from Bama.

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