Wednesday, 21 May 2014
Nigerian Military Sights Abducted Chibok Schoolgirls In 3 Boko Haram Camps - PREMIUM TIMES
Nigeria’s Special Forces from the Army’s 7th Division
have sighted and narrowed the search for the more than
250 abducted Chibok schoolgirls to three camps
operated by the extremist Boko Haram sect north of
Kukawa at the western corridors of the Lake Chad,
senior military and administration officials have said.
“It has been a most difficult but heroic breakthrough,”
one senior military official said in Abuja.
That claim was supported by another senior commander
from the Army’s 7th Division, the military formation
created to deal with the insurgency in the Northeast.
The 7th Division is headquartered in Maiduguri, the
Borno State capital.
The breakthrough comes at a critical moment for the
Nigerian military that has faced cutting criticism over
its handling of the kidnapping of the girls more than a
month ago.
The news is also key for the Maiduguri-based 7th
Division a week after a humiliating mutiny by troops of
its 101 battalion who fired at the General Officer
Commanding the division, Ahmadu Mohammed, a
Major General.
Maj. Gen. Mohammed escaped unhurt, but has since
been redeployed. The soldiers blamed him for the
deaths of at least four of their colleagues killed near
Chibok, a remote community in Borno State where the
girls were taken captives April 14.
But military insiders said Mr. Mohammed was targeted
for daring to arrest the growing indiscipline within his
troop.
The abductions have sparked international outrage,
with the United States, United Kingdom, France and
Israel, providing intelligence and surveillance
assistance.
Nigerian military officials coordinating the search and
other officials in Abuja said Boko Haram insurgents
split the girls into batches and held them at their camps
in Madayi, Dogon Chuku and Meri, all around the
Sector 3 operational division of the Nigerian military
detachment confronting the group’s deadly campaign.
Another source said there is a fourth camp at Kangarwa,
also in Borno State. That claim could not be
independently verified.
“Our team first sighted the girls on April 26 and we have
been following their movement with the terrorists ever
since,” one of our sources said.
“That’s why we just shake our heads when people
insinuate that the military is lethargic in the search for
the girls.”
The location of the abducted girls – north east of
Kukawa – opens a new insight into the logistic
orientation of Boko Haram, responsible for thousands of
deaths in a five-year long insurgency. President
Goodluck Jonathan said the group has killed at least
12,000 people so far – that’s minus the hundreds killed
in a car bomb on Tuesday in Jos and the about 10
murdered on Sunday in Kano in a suicide bombing.
But the details established by the military shows that
while the world’s attention is focused on the Sambisa
forest reserves, about 330 kilometres south of
Maiduguri, the terrorists mapped a complex mission
that began at Chibok, and veered north east of Sambisa,
before heading to west of Bama and east of Konduga.
With the sighting, officials fear that Boko Haram
militants may be seeking to create new options of
escape all the way to Lo-gone-Et Chari in Cameroon to
its Southeast, Lake Chad to its east and Diffa in Niger
Republic to its north, providing a multiple escape
options in the event of hostile ground operations
against it.
Notwithstanding the sighting, the government is said
not to be considering the use of force against the
extremists, a choice informed by concerns for the safety
of the students.
But with growing local and international pressure, a
likely option may be for the authorities to enter into
talks with the group, whose leader, Abubakar Shekau, in
a May 12 video broadcast, called for dialogue and
“prisoner” swap with the government.
The government has ruled out that option in the open
but knowledgeable sources in Abuja hinted at a
possible “twin track” approach that includes open
rejection and a closet engagement.
“That option is not as bitter as you think in the face of
the alternatives confronting us,” the source who has
deep insight on the thinking of the administration, said.
“Government is working hard to free the girls in less
than one week, possibly before end of this week,” the
source said.
Defence spokesperson, Chris Olukolade, a Major
General, told PREMIUM TIMES he would not comment
on the ongoing rescue operation.
“You don’t expect me to tell you that the girls have
been sighted or have not been sighted,” Mr. Olukolade
said. “I will only say our team are working hard and
taking note of every information provided to ensure that
our girls are rescued without delay.”
Civic leader Shehu Sani who fired a letter to the Sultan
of Sokoto and leader of Nigeria’s Muslim, however told
PREMIUM TIMES that what must be done urgently is
for the Sultan to summon all the influential Islamic
clerics with credibility in the north and use them to
reach out to the insurgents to release the girls.
“As far as I know this has not been done and to expect
the committee [headed by former army intelligence
chief, Major General Sani Bako] now working to
determine the situation of the Chibok abduction to help
on this will be a waste of time,” Mr. Sani said.
HOW FAR WITH FOREIGN ASSISTANCE
PREMIUM TIMES checks indicate no significant help
has so far come from the horde of military experts that
flew in from the UK, Canada, France, Spain, the United
States and Israel to help Nigeria in the search for the
girls.
For the army, according to inside sources, the critical
needs now to contain the insurgency, are airlift
helicopters, armoured tanks, and protective gear, but the
foreign military presence is not leading in that
direction.
President Goodluck Jonathan disclosed at the just
concluded World Economic Forum on Africa, in Abuja,
that the administration had recently approved USD1
billion to spend on military hardware and that more
funds were needed.
PREMIUM TIMES reliably gathered from army sources
in Maiduguri and Abuja that foreign military assistance
has so far been greeted with some ambivalence or
perhaps distractions.
“Foreign military assistance you speak about has been
largely in the media and for international public
relations value that is almost certainly not likely to end
up in boots on the ground or badly needed weaponry to
assist us here,” one of our sources said.
One arm of the foreign assistance cell of the United
States with about 30 men and the UK with 10 men have
been largely based in Abuja holding “endless
meetings” with local officers.
Local officers in Maiduguri say they “haven’t as much
as seen even the slightest intelligence from our foreign
friends.”
This claim belies the widely held views of military
cooperation at the intelligence levels, since the US Air
Force (USAF) Beechcraft MC-12W Liberty aircraft,
based in Niamey in Niger, began flying over the north
east region, according to reports from the Jane’s Defense
magazine, quoting U.S. government sources.
Niamey is also base to the USAF General Atomics MQ-1
Predator UAVs but they have not been reported to be
participating on the northeast mission against Boko
Haram.
Jane’s magazine also reported that the USAF base in
Niamey will soon be joined by the Northrop Grumman
RQ-4 Global Hawk unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs)
flying from US Naval Air Station Sigonella on Sicily.
If the foreign forces triggers into active mission, the
French, which deployed two General Atomics MQ-9
Reaper unmanned aerial vehicles to Ndjamena in
January, and which keeps a large detachment of
Dassault Rafale and Dassault Mirage 2000 fighters as
well as Boeing KC-135FR tankers, will be the most
influential on account of their proximity to the location
sites of the abducted girls near the Chad borders.
Last Saturday, May 18, the UK deployed the A
Raytheon Sentinel R.1 Airborne Stand-Off Radar
(ASTOR) aircraft from its base at RAF Waddington in
Lincolnshire to Accra.
The overall air operation by the United States, United
Kingdom, and France that is concentrated on building
the information picture of the crisis zone and
coordinating airborne ISTAR, satellite imagery, and
signals intelligence assets to best effect, is being co-
coordinated by AFRICOM’s air coordination station at
Ramstein Airbase in Germany.
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