Boko Haram sect
| credits: File copy
| credits: File copy
The
terrorist sect, Boko Haram, on Sunday reportedly killed 15 persons,
mostly traders in a local market in Daku village in the Askira/Uba Local
Government Area of Borno State.
The terrorists were said to have stormed
the market in the early hours of Sunday, armed with AK47 rifles,
Improvised Explosive Devices and petrol bombs.
They killed and set the structures in the
market on fire. They were said to have set several shops, houses,
vehicles and motorcycles ablaze.
The Askira/Uba council shares boundaries
with Biu, Chibok, Gwoza and Hawul council areas, and is in the southern
part of Borno State. It is about 190 kilometres to Maiduguri, the state
capital.
Sources in the village said the
terrorists came on motorcycles and in a Hilux Toyota vehicle at about
11am and opened fire on the traders, killing 15.
They were also said to have carted away
food items and unspecified amount of money. They reportedly operated for
about an hour before fleeing towards the Sambisa forest.
Attempts to get official confirmation
from both the police and military sources were unsuccessful as their
spokesmen could not be reached on the phone.
Meanwhile, the United States has called
on the Federal Government to establish a National Victims Fund for the
rehabilitation of victims of Boko Haram’s horrific violence.
A US Congressional Delegation, made up of
Representatives Steve Stockman, Sheila Jackson-Lee, Frederica Wilson
and Lois Frankel, told journalists at a news conference held at the
Unity Fountain in Abuja, on Sunday, that the Fund was necessary to
assist victims of Boko Haram insurgency to recover from their traumatic
experience.
Speaking on behalf of the humanitarian
mission to Nigeria, co-chair, Jackson-Lee, said the delegation was in
the country to focus on bringing back the abducted girls and stopping
the security challenge in Nigeria.
On April 14, insurgents abducted over 200
pupils of the Government Girls’ Secondary School, Chibok, Borno State,
and efforts to secure their release have not been successful as the
abductors have held on to the schoolgirls for the past two months.
The abduction of the girls had generated
worldwide outcry with protesters across the globe asking the government
to bring back the girls.
Frankel said, “Collectively, we bring a
wide range of special knowledge to Nigeria and to focus on a very
important issue. We have come from the US to focus on bringing the girls
back and to focus on stopping the violence of Boko Haram.
“So we come today with solution, we also
come today in asking the north-east and Nigeria to continue to accept
international help and it is time to find a way to contain the Boko
Haram and save the lives of so many.”
The chairman of the humanitarian mission,
Stockman, said the group hoped to join Nigeria in a comprehensive
partnership to save her from the current crisis, adding that they would
extend a hand of friendship to resolve the problem.
However, the Chairman, National
Information Centre, Mr. Mike Omeri, has said that the need to evolve the
right strategy to rescue the girls is what separates the girls from
freedom,.
In an interview with one of our
correspondents, Omeri emphasised that it was only when the right
strategy had been adopted that the girls would be rescued alive.
The Chief of Defence Staff, Air Marshal
Alex Badeh, had on May 25 said the security leadership had located where
Boko Haram members were holding the abducted girls but that the
military would not use force to release the girls because of the need to
prevent the insurgents from killing them.
The military chief said the military had
the capacity to bring back the abducted girls but would not use force
for the crucial assignment. He stressed that the military knew what it
was doing and should be allowed to continue with its work.
Asked what had been delaying the rescue
operation since the military admitted it had located where the girls
were being kept, Omeri, who heads the National Orientation Agency,
simply said, “Strategy.”
“These girls need to be brought home alive and it is the strategy that will make the difference,” he said.
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