Lawmaker Demands More Doctors In Mubi General Hospital

Member representing Mubi South in Adamawa House of Assembly, Alhaji Abdulrahman Abubakar, has called on the State Government to urgently deploy more medical doctors to Mubi General Hospital.

 
Making the appeal during an interview with newsmen on Tuesday in Yola, Abubakar said this became necessary to address challenges of victims of insurgent attacks in Mubi zone.

 
He regretted that the hospital has only one qualified doctor.

 

“This is grossly inadequate for Mubi which is the second largest town in the state.

 

Life has fully returned to normal in Mubi since the Boko Haram invasion and it is high time the government do something urgently about this development.

 

For instance, some of the injured victims of Monday suicide attack in Madagali town were taken to Mubi general hospital, showing the need to do something about the hospital which is located in the ongoing fight against insurgency,’’ urged the legislator.

 

However, Abubakar commended the State Government for embarking on 14 road projects in Mubi.

 

He urged the people to accord the APC-led adminsitration at all levels maximum support to succeed in delivering democracy dividends.

 

On planned protest against the state government by Mubi local government council workers over non-payment of their outstanding salaries from the collected bailout fund, the lawmaker advised them to exercise patience as he was in dialogue with relevant authorities to address the problem.

 

Abubakar, who was suspended by his collegaues recently, also urged people in his constituency not to despair as he has taken the matter to court for redress.

 

He thanked the people for their sustained support and cooperation, adding that the situation would improve in the New Year, particularly in liberated areas like Mubi as President Muhammadu Buhari was committed to getting the country out of the woods.

 

 

(NAN)

Rebuilding What Was Broken: The Future Awards Africa Dreams Big For Mubi, Yola And Chibok

The Future Awards Africa (TFAA) team intends to visit 100 African cities in one year as part of events leading up to its 10th anniversary. The tour, they say, will help re-focus attention on the issues faced by young Africans, emphasize how members of their “global brain trust” across the world have solved these issues and then set up hubs of past winners, nominees, partners and volunteers in each city they visit to help solve the problems.

The early cities visited by the TFAA team received blasé responses from the watching public. Enugu, Banjul, Ibadan, Akure, Port Harcourt and Kano are all important cities in their own rights, but the visit by the TFAA team felt almost too routine to make people stop and pay close attention. Then last week, the team stepped into the heart of Nigeria’s ongoing war against terror and the lives scarred as a result, when they visited the towns of Chibok, Mubi and Yola. Their mission – same as with all the other cities visited – was not just to highlight challenges, but go beyond that to “spotlight inspiring stories and set up hubs to solve problems at scale.”

Co-founder of TFAA and managing partner of RED, Chude Jideonwo, led that leg of the tour himself, despite having been absent on all the other stops. “I had to go,” Jideonwo told The ScoopNG in an email. “I just had to go. I wanted to walk the talk.” He said that “engagement, advocacy, problem solving are more effective when the person passionate about the issue gets his or her hands dirty.”

Jideonwo, who laments the limits of his humanity as an individual managing three firms and who cannot physically be present at every stop of the tour, said he decided to go to the “most at-risk areas” because the image of doing first before asking others to do is important.

Chibok is the town in Borno state where over 200 school girls were kidnapped in 2014, leading to the birth of the worldwide #BringBackOurGirls movement. The girls remain missing till date. Yola and Mubi, the two largest and most important towns in Adamawa state, have suffered severe disruptions in normal life as a result of insurgency. The latter town was overrun by terrorists who chased out an army contingent stationed there in 2014 and hoisted their flags, shutting down schools and offices. The most prominent educational institution in the town, the Mubi Polytechnic, only reopened in June 2015, eight months after the attack. Yola, meanwhile, continues to suffer bomb attacks with the most recent occurring last month when suicide bombers struck at a mosque during Friday prayers. Over 20 people lost their lives.

“The stories and the people we have met on this trip have confirmed some of our worst fears, but more importantly also fired up our resolve,” said Jideonwo after the tour. “There is so much work we have to do, and we are building a network of problem solvers across the continent to engage, solve and sustain the solutions to these problems.”

Mohamed Diaby, another member of the TFAA Central Working Committee, from Abidjan, said even though they have seen enough challenges and issues during the tour to cause worry, they remain “determined to lead an army of young people, through our hubs, to do this urgent work, to solve these problems.”

Three such hubs have now been set up by TFAA in Mubi with the Initiative for Human Rights; in Yola with Centre for Caring, Empowerment and Peace Initiative (CCEPI) and in Chibok with the Red Cross. According to the organisers, the hubs will work together with the Global TFAA Secretariat to “pull resources and media attention to solve the identified problems in each community.”

Up next is Johannesburg, South Africa, which will be the last stop for phase one of the tour. The Future Awards Africa 2015 will be hosted in Lagos on Sunday, 6 December, 2015.

The team

Team with a young girl

TFAA Team with the vigilante group who won the war with the soldiers

TFAA team

7 New Babies Born At IDPs Camp

No fewer than seven new births have been recorded at the Mubi transit camp of Nigerian returnees from the Republic of Cameroon. This is just as the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) has transported 5,762 returnees to the Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) camps in Yola, Adamawa State.

Health workers assisted in the safe delivery of seven pregnant women of four girls and three boys who are all in stable condition.

The Director General of NEMA, Alhaji Muhammad Sani Sidi, had earlier visited Mubi to officially receive the returnees and assured them of the Federal Government’s support. The Deputy Governor of Borno State, Alhaji Zanna Umar Mustapha, accompanied him apparently because most of the returnees, who had been displaced by insurgents before fleeing to the Republic of Cameroon, were from the state.

Meanwhile, NEMA’s Director of Search and Rescue, Air Commodore Charles Otegbade, who is coordinating the evacuation, has stated that 4,641 of the returnees were transported at the weekend, from the camps in Yola to Borno State.

He said: “We have moved the returnees from the Mubi reception centre and all those at the Nigerian/Cameroun border post in Sahuda, after clearance by the Nigerian Immigration Service and other security agencies, to the IDPs camps in Yola.”

Read More: sunnewsonline

Full Report of President Jonathan’s Visit to North East

President Goodluck Jonathan Thursday in Mubi, Adamawa State and Baga, Borno State applauded Nigerian troops for proving their mettle once again through the rapid recapture of territories formerly held by insurgents in the country’s North-Eastern states.

He assured the soldiers that they wouldl be duly rewarded for their bravery and patriotic service to the nation at the successful conclusion of ongoing operations against Boko Haram.

Addressing officers and men of the Nigerian Army in both towns, which were recently recaptured from Boko Haram, President Jonathan declared that he and all Nigerians were very proud of the bravery, competence and patriotism with which they were now undertaking operations to expel the insurgents from all parts of Borno, Yobe and Adamawa states.

The President said that with their recent successes, which have overwhelmingly turned the tide against Boko Haram, the Nigerian military has proven beyond any doubt that it remains fully capable of defending the territorial integrity of Nigeria.

The military’s recent victories against Boko Haram, President Jonathan told the troops, have also proven conclusively that all those, within and outside the country, who cast aspersions on Nigerian soldiers and questioned their ability and willingness to overcome the insurgents were misinformed and wrong.

Mr. Jonathan, who was accompanied on the trip by the National Security Adviser, Sambo Dasuki and all the Service Chiefs, assured the troops that the Federal Government would ensure they received all the equipment and logistics they require to complete the ongoing mission to reassert government’s effective control over all areas formerly held by Boko Haram.

The President promised the soldiers that all issues pertaining to their welfare will be properly and expeditiously addressed.

Families of soldiers who had sadly lost their lives in battles against Boko Haram would also be well provided for, the President further assured the troops.

The soldiers responded to the President’s address with chants of “Never Again” and assured him that insurgents and terrorists will never again be allowed to take and hold any Nigerian territory.

While in Mubi, President Jonathan, accompanied by the Governor of Adamawa State, Bala Ngilari and the Minister of Youth Development, Bonnie Haruna, paid a courtesy call on the Emir, Isa Ahmadu.

He assured the Emir that the Federal Government would do all within its powers to ensure that normalcy was speedily returned to Mubi and other towns and settlements recently recaptured from Boko Haram to enable displaced persons return to their homes in the shortest possible time.

President Jonathan also undertook an aerial inspection of other towns and areas recently recaptured from Boko Haram including Monguno.

Before returning to Abuja, the President met and conferred with the Borno State Governor, Kashim Shettima, in Maiduguri.

Reuben Abati
Special Adviser to the President
(Media & Publicity)

Jonathan Heads To Baga After Mubi Visit

President Goodluck Jonathan has visited Mubi in Adamawa State, more than three months after Nigerian troops recaptured the town from the insurgent group, Boko Haram.

The president arrived Yola international airport at about 10.45a.m. Thursday, accompanied by the Chief of Defence staff and all the service chiefs and the inspector general of police. He later travelled by helicopter to Mubi. At Mubi, Mr. Jonathan met with the Emir of Mubi, Isa Ahamadu, and the people of the area. There were unconfirmed reports that the president visited Vintim village in Mubi, the home town of Nigeria’s Defence Chief, Alex Badeh.

Read More: premiumtimesng.com

Read the Account of People who Lived in “Boko Haram State”

Boko Haram says it is building an Islamic state that will revive the glory days of northern Nigeria’s medieval Muslim empires, but for those in its territory life is a litany of killings, kidnappings, hunger and economic collapse.

The Islamist group’s five-year-old campaign has become one of the deadliest in the world, with around 10,000 people killed last year, according to the Council on Foreign Relations. Hundreds, mostly women and children, have been kidnapped.

It remains the biggest threat to the stability of Africa’s biggest economy ahead of a vote on Feb. 14 in which President Goodluck Jonathan will seek re-election.

But while it has matched Islamic State in Syria and Iraq in its brutality — it beheads its enemies on camera — it has seriously lagged in the more mundane business of state building.

“The Islamic state is a figment of their imagination. They are just going into your house and saying they have taken over,” said Phineas Elisha, government spokesman for Adamawa state, one of three states under emergency rule to fight the insurgency.

Unlike its Middle East counterparts wooing locals with a semblance of administration, villagers trapped by Boko Haram face food shortages, slavery, killing and a lock down on economic activity, those who escaped say.

“(They) have no form of government,” Elisha, who saw the devastation caused by Boko Haram after government forces recaptured the town of Mubi in November.

Boko Haram, which never talks to media except to deliver jihadist videos to local journalists, could not be reached for comment.

Boko Haram’s leaders talk about reviving one of the West African Islamic empires that for centuries prospered off the Saharan trade in slaves, ivory and gold, but they demonstrate little evidence of state building.

In August a man saying he was Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau — the military says it killed Shekau — issued a video declaring a “Muslim territory” in Gwoza, by the Cameroon border.

There were echoes of Islamic State’s proclaimed caliphate in Iraq and Syria two months earlier. Boko Haram controls an area just over 30,000 square km of territory, about the size of Belgium, according to a Reuters calculation based on security sources and government data.

But while in Syria, after initially brutal takeovers, Islamic State has tried to win over communities, those who escaped Boko Haram say the rebels do little for them beyond forcing them to adopt their brand of Islam on pain of death.

“They provide raw rice to cook, the rice that they stole from the shops. They provide a kettle and … scarves to cover up the women,” said Maryam Peter from Pambla village.

“People are going hungry. They are only feeding on corn and squash. No meat, nothing like that. The insurgents are not providing anything else,” she added.

Maryam said most daily interactions with the militants involved them questioning villagers on their movements and forbidding them from trying to escape — a rule she managed to flout when she fled a week ago.

A government-run camp in a former school is now her home, along with 1,000 others, where mothers cook on outdoor fires while children run around. Some 1.5 million people have been rendered homeless by the war, Oxfam says.

And those the militants kill, they often fail to bury. The first thing the Nigerian Red Cross has to do when a town falls back into government hands is clear the corpses, Aliyu Maikano, a Red Cross official, told Reuters.

After the army recaptured Mubi in November, Maikano had to cover his nose to avoid the stench of rotting corpses.

Those still alive “were starved for food, water, almost everything there. There’s no drinking water because (in) most of the wells there you’ll find dead bodies,” Maikano said.

Many residents looked tattered and malnourished, and some were unable to speak.

“They are heartless. ISIS (Islamic State) is a kind of organised group, it’s a business. These guys are not.”

A former resident of Mubi said the rebels had renamed the town “Madinatul Islam” or “City of Islam”.

But when government spokesman Phineas Elisha walked into the Emir’s palace after its recapture, everything had been looted, even the windows and doors.

“Mubi was a ghost town … Virtually all the shops were looted.” he said. It took him hours to find a bottle of water.

Sometimes the rebels simply loot the unprotected villages and hide out in bush camps, security sources say. Murna Philip, who escaped the occupied town of Michika five months ago, said a few dozen fighters had occupied an abattoir, a school and a lodge, but little else.

To survive under their watch you have to pretend to support them, said Andrew Miyanda, who escaped the rebels last week, walking for days to the Benue river.

“They would write Jama’atu Ahlis Sunna Lidda’Awati Wal-Jihad (Boko Haram’s full name) on their trouser legs in marker or the back of their shirts,” he said. “You had to turn up your trousers with the marker on to show that you are a member.”

Buildings were torched and boys were abducted for “training”, he said, a practice reminiscent of Uganda’s Lord’s Resistance Army.

Slowly, with the help of traditional hunters armed with home made guns and a reputation for magic powers, government forces have pushed Boko Haram out of some of its southern possessions.

Morris Enoch, a leader of the hunters, says they found an arsenal of military weapons: rocket launchers, machine guns, dynamite, anti-aircraft guns and grenades. The rebels rarely leave behind much else.

Credit: Reuters

Nigerian Military Recaptures Mubi, Gombi, Maiha, Hong Council Areas

The military announced it is now in full control of Mubi, Gombi, Maiha and Hong local government areas of Adamawa State earlier captured by the Boko Haram insurgents mid last month.

The announcement came on a day President Goodluck Jonathan commended the nation’s armed forces for their courage and sacrifices in the war against insurgency in parts of the country even as he assured that the Federal Government was working hard to improve security in the North-East ahead next year’s elections.

On the recaptured council areas on Adamawa, an army officer (who did not want his name in print) who conducted newsmen round the council areas weekend said the troops in collaboration with other security agencies chased out the insurgents).

The officer said the tour with the journalists was necessary to debunk insinuation that the insurgents were still in the areas and more importantly to assure residents of the affected areas that their places were safe, well protected and fortified for them to return to their homes.

Credit: Vanguard Nigeria

 

This War We Fight (A Tribute To Our Wonderful Soldiers Fighting Boko Haram, Lord Bless Them)?

This war we fight
Its goes through the night till the morning
Are fallen soldiers Standing Angels?
We stand up on the shoulders
About the cold war they told us, peace
Be still, peace is not far away
It’s not far from where we are today
This war we fight with the might of the almighty
So even on dark days
This light will guide me
A life given for another, Is a time used wisely.
I write for the brothers and sisters
Eyes of them
Between the sheets of humanity
Our families the devil’s calamity
Soldiers that fight for our sanity
We celebrate them only annually
But everyday, everyday is a way to salute
Those of fatigue and boots , the mothers and fathers of those troops
The mission is to harmonize like old groups
This war we fight is for our young
So that our young can become recruits
Teachers, lawyers, writers
Fighters for a higher purpose
Becoming fine young men and women for service
Serving each other and the mother earth that birth us
Serving to God, that truly knows what there worth is
So for all our soldiers are write these words
Because of what you contribute
We pay tribute
For those of you who left us you still live through
Because this war we fight is everywhere all over
And in this war we are all soldiers.
@aaogungbesan
The peom was originally written by a Rapper Common to the veterans ,

Articles on www.omojuwa.com are solely authors opinion

Boko Haram invades Hong & Gombi in Adamawa

Scores of Boko Haram fighters on Thursday invaded two towns in northeast Nigeria’s Adamawa state after hunters and civilian vigilantes reportedly ousted them from a key town, residents told AFP.

The Islamists raided Hong and Gombi, some 100 kilometres (62.5 miles) from the state capital, Yola, after they were pushed out of the commercial hub of Mubi, which they seized two weeks ago.

Boko Haram is thought to have captured more than two dozen towns in Yobe, Borno and Adamawa states in recent months, as part of its quest to establish a hardline caliphate in the region.

But despite apparently losing control of Mubi, which the Islamists renamed Madinatul Islam or “City of Islam” in Arabic the invasion of Hong and Gombi saw them move closer to Yola.

Thousands of residents have been taking refuge in the city from the violence.

The vigilantes had reportedly reclaimed the town of Maiha on Wednesday after a fierce battle in which scores of the ins?urgents were said to have been killed, although there was no official confirmation.

In Gombi, resident Haruna Awwalu said Boko Haram were patrolling the streets, firing heavy weaponry, while another local, Rabi Tanimu, said people were cowering indoors and many had fled into the bush.

“They have burnt down the police station, the local government secretariat and the market? after overpowering the police, ” Awwalu said.

In Hong, 20 kilometres away, the police station was also razed and the militants raised their black flag outside the home of a retired military general.

Chibado Bobi, chief of staff in Adamawa state governor’s office in Mubi confirmed that civilian vigilantes and hunters had recaptured the town.

“It is true Mubi has fallen back into the hands of Nigerian soldiers with the help of local vigilantes and hunters,” he said.

“It is however too early for residents who fled to move back to Mubi because the security and vigilantes need to mop up all remnants of the group that may be lurking in nearby areas.”

One resident, who asked not to be named, said about 200 vigilantes and hunters armed with den (home-made) guns, spears, clubs, bows and arrows, and machetes were involved in the recapture.

“I saw the Boko Haram fighters fleeing in droves in their vehicles when the hunters and vigilantes entered the town”, he added.

“Their emir? (leader) was captured by the hunters and made to sit outside the military barracks that he and his men turned into their base.

“He had his hands tied from the back and we swarmed to have a look but we were later dispersed by the hunters.”

Credit: AFP

Execution, Beheading, Amputation Claims in Boko Haram Fight

Nigerian troops have been accused of killing 16 Boko Haram suspects, raising fresh concerns about the conduct of the military and the civilians supporting the battle against the militant group.

Earlier, vigilantes claimed to have beheaded dozens of Islamist fighters in the country’s far northeast.

Boko Haram, meanwhile, is reported to have begun enforcing strict Islamic law by amputating the hands of thieves and razing churches in a captured town it renamed as part of its self-styled caliphate.

On Wednesday, 21 civilians were killed after Boko Haram fighters clashed with troops in the restive northeast of Nigeria, a local lawmaker said.

The incidents have undermined repeated government claims of a ceasefire and peace talks.

In Potiskum, 16 men who were arrested after morning prayers on Wednesday were found dead in a morgue with bullet wounds just hours later, community leaders and hospital staff told AFP.

Locals in the Dogo Tebo area of the city believed the men were picked up and killed because all of them were from the Kanuri ethnic group that forms the bulk of Boko Haram’s membership.

“All the bodies have gunshot wounds on them,” said a nurse at the Potiskum General Hospital, who asked not to be identified because he was not authorised to speak to the media.

The bodies had been brought in by soldiers and were formally identified by community leaders, he told AFP.

On Monday, at least 15 people were killed and some 50 others were injured in a suicide bombing targeting a major Shia Muslim festival in Potiskum, which is Yobe state’s commercial capital.

A number of others were killed when troops deployed to the scene opened fire, the head of the Shia community, Mustapha Lawan Nasidi, said at the time.

The latest deaths were described by another community leader as “cold-blooded murder” while residents expressed concern about the fate of a Muslim cleric and three others who were also detained.

Neither the military in Yobe or the capital, Abuja, responded to AFP when asked for comment and there was no word either on claims from Biu in neighbouring Borno state about the beheadings.

A member of the civilian vigilante group, Umar Hassan, said they and troops ambushed Boko Haram fighters last Friday as they prepared a raid on Sabon Gari village in the south of the state.

“We killed 41 of them and decapitated them and brought the heads to Biu, which we displayed to people to demystify Boko Haram,” he said.

Two Biu residents said the vigilantes put the heads on wooden spikes and drove around the town, telling people the Islamists did not have magical powers.

“It was like hunters displaying their game after a hunting expedition,” said, one, Silas Buba.

The incidents will add to concerns of human rights groups about the response of the military and the vigilantes, both of whom have been accused of atrocities in the past.

Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch (HRW) said they were aware of the reports and were investigating the authenticity of the claims.

“This is the latest in a string of abuses in which pro-government vigilante groups have been implicated,” said HRW’s Nigeria researcher Mausi Segun.

Boko Haram took over the town of Mubi in Adamawa state last week and residents who fled the town in recent days said they had now renamed it Maidanatul Islam, or “City of Islam” in Arabic.

In Mubi, Boko Haram chopped off the hands of 10 men accused of theft last Friday and burnt down churches, said Ahmad Maishanu, who fled Mubi on Wednesday.

In a video released on October 2, Boko Haram showed the stoning to death of a man accused of adultery, a man having his right hand cut off for theft and a young man and woman given 100 lashes each for sex outside marriage.

The group, which wants to create a hardline Islamic state in Nigeria’s northeast, is now thought to control at least two dozen towns in the region.

The Nigerian government and military made a surprise announcement on October 17 that it had secured a ceasefire deal with the militants and peace talks were being held.

But there has been no let-up in the violence since then and last Friday the group’s leader, Abubakar Shekau, dismissed claims of an end to hostilities as “a lie”.

Credit: Yahoo News/ AFP/ Aminu Abubakar

#KakandaTemple ~ Counterterrorism: A Time to Act

Image credit: 36ng.com

As I write this, the place our politicians and their accomplices used to refer to as “the northeast” in their scheming for power and measurements of their influences in the power game, the very place the nation’s implicit commander-in-chief once referred to as “fringes”, as against the “mainstream” territories of his and his colleagues’ residences, is becoming the sovereign entity of the terrorising Boko Haram in what still seems like a nightmare to the affected, a propaganda to the unsympathetic distant observers, and a conspiracy to the denialists.

But while this is ongoing, while innocent citizens of this slaughterhouse that is being paraded as the giant of Africa by self-ridiculing PR firms on the payroll of the Federal Government or some other ironic patron, are being killed, we’re occupied by our hatred of one another and facts and realities, as we highlight and debate the politics, instead of the lives, of the people of northeastern Nigeria.

While we’re at this, their towns and villages are exposed to continuous threats and attacks, with survivors not only psychologically traumatised, but forsaken in their expectations of reassuring counterterrorism arrangements to convince them that they’re indeed subjects of a big nation, being “monitored” from Abuja.

With every word uttered or written by analysts of the militant sect, with every insult hurled at reporters of the ongoing carnages, the truth remains that talk is cheap. We’ve been going berserk in our comfort zones as we theorise the reality in the landlocked region, and even though we’re sincerely upset, our anger is inconsequential unless it challenges us to overcome our differences, harmonise our thoughts and then ally to proffer solutions to a tragedy that does not discriminate along the lines of our earned identities. An explosion, we all know, consumes both the Muslim and the Christian, both the Hausa and the Igbo, both the northerner and the southerner, everybody within the perimeter of its blast. This is a fact, it will happen even as we talk, if the terrorists act.

The question to ask ourselves now is: beyond writing profound obituaries and professing solidarity online, what are we, private citizens of a nation at crossroads, to do? This is no longer the time for boring intellectual or political discourses of the reality consuming the most insecure of the nation’s citizens day in, day out, bit by bit, fringe by fringe, and now from taking over and declaring as constituencies of what may seem like an imaginary caliphate, villages to villages, it has escalated to local government councils to local government councils being taken over.

This is no longer the time to debate the statistics of unnamed and faceless and unknown innocent citizens whose deaths are being registered as “collateral damage”, their honour denied. Rather, this is the time to come together and complement on the efforts of the military and, especially, demand to know how our huge security votes are spent. We must question the President, now demanding a loan to fight terrorism, while our troops in the northeast are still set to “tactical maneuvering” mode.

These past days, I tried to avoid commentaries on the escalating insurgency, because we’ve been talking for too long without really understanding one another, only stringing invectives together to dismiss or deconstruct dissenting views or form dangerous conspiracy theories that only complicate our security challenges.

Some of us, however, instead of adding our voices to solution-finding struggles, are only interested in the politics of the narratives, thus forming divisive political groups to support politicians who do not even know that part of being an aspiring leader is sensitivity to the failings of the society and of the incumbent leaders. Unrelenting political activism, that should be the responsibility of the opposition in a dysfunctional country.

But how many of our politicians, especially those now aspiring to lead, have actually been there for the displaced citizens? They don’t even know the locations of the IDP camps, so thus “engaged” in their pursuits of the voting citizens, potential voters, whose stomachs they seek to rehabilitate, ignoring the starving refugees who, to them, are now electorally useless.

We live in a country where private citizens strutted to bear arms for the defence of Palestine. I believe that the anger of those “Nigerian-Palestinians”, and that of many others, is needed now in our counterterrorism. This is the only country in which we don’t need a visa to exist, to which we don’t need a visa to visit, of which we’re citizens with no strings attached. So if the military is short of personnel, I’m sure there are many willing citizens available for training and deployment. If the government can’t protect us, there’s no shame in allowing private citizens to form armed community defence corps. Nobody deserves to die without a fight – in self-defence – or an attempt to be defended by the authority.

?Now as Mubi, a commercial live-wire of Adamawa State, falls, and our troops are reportedly fleeing, there’s no better proof that the Nigerian citizens are on their own. Even the UN is still “speaking grammar” over our dilemma, as though the all-knowing America, which has once offered to help us, doesn’t even know that yet.

Despite being a kindergarten student of International Relations, I’m still forced to ask: what does the African Union really do? Before its eyes, NATO destroyed Gaddafi, destabilised Libya; before its eyes, foreign powers mess up its member countries, uprooting renegade leaders and installing governments just as bad; before its very eyes ragtag armies of perverted insurgents gather guts to topple governments of its member countries…

As these happen, the representatives of Arab League, the United Nations and the European Union have formed a coalition against ISIS, while the African Union still pretends that Boko Haram is not a continental threat. And the President of this burning Nigeria even went to a steadier Burkina Faso of rationally angry citizens to “keep peace”, a needless showoff, to deceive the world – that Africa is indeed in charge of its mess, and rising. May God save us from us!

By Gimba Kakanda

@gimbakakanda (Twitter)

Boko Haram Enforces Strict Islamic Laws in Mubi (Warning: Offensive Image)

Reports reaching us say that Boko Haram has not just enforced strict Sharia laws in Mubi, but has also executed it on some residents.

Our sources reveal that the insurgents paraded about 5 people or more with amputated hands; the punishment for thieves. We were told that the offenders allegedly inflated the price of beans and were selling a bag for 2 thousand Naira, hence the insurgents went after the traders, arrested them and amputated their hands after trial.

Sources add that the offenders were paraded around streets of mubi to serve as an example to other exploiting traders and thieves as well.

Sad Stories from Mubi…

Reports has it that 3,000 people have fled Mubi in Adamawa State and stories have reached us on accounts of people’s various experiences during the uproar.

We have been informed of a woman who was led to forced labour due to shock. Sources add that she lost her life during childbirth and another woman equally fleeing from the insurgents stopped and picked the new born baby.

Another source told us about two brothers who wanted to run out of Mubi with their aged father, but the father told them to run off without him so that he will not slow them down, due to his inability to walk. We were told that the older brother while running off realized that his younger  was not with him and he remembered that the younger brother swore not to leave without the father, so he  went back to find him.

As he went back, he met people who warned him not to proceed to Mubi but he persisted till he got home and found his brother with the father. They eventually agreed to bundle the father against his wish and began to move out. Unfortunately, they were stopped by the insurgents who shot the two brothers at sight and left the father who died of cardiac arrest.

 

Boko Haram Over Run Vintim

Reports say Boko Haram has overran the home town of the Chief of Defence Staff, Air Marshal Alex Badeh, Vintim, Adamawa State; proceeding beyond Mubi.

After attacking Mubi, reports say the terrorists stormed the 234 Nigerian Army Battalion, burnt down the police station and the Mubi prison, setting the inmates free, also hoisted their flag at the Palace of the Emir of Mubi.

Defense Headquarters Orders Retreating Soldiers to Recapture Mubi

Defense Headquarters in Abuja has  ordered retreating troops to go back and recapture the Mubi from the insurgents.

Reports say that Chief of Defense Staff, Alex Badeh, whose hometown, Vimtim, less than 15 miles from the location of the insurgents, is angry at the action of the fleeing soldiers.

Sources say that the soldiers who fled yesterday have now been ordered to converge at Song, a small township and await final orders to march on Mubi to confront the insurgents and try to dislodge them, adding that there was no aircrafts set to assist the relaunch.

 

Breaking: Insurgents Threaten to Capture Yola Sunday…

Reports reaching us claim that rumours have been brewing within Yola,  the capital city of Adamawa, that Boko Haram insurgents are threatening to invade Yola by Sunday.

Our sources reveal that there have been claims that the insurgents are already closing up to Fufore, a town in Adamawa, not very far from Yola. The distance between Fufore and Yola is 51Km, which is approximately 45- 50 minutes drive.

Fear has gripped residents in Yola as they witnessed the influx of family relatives and some Nigerian soldiers who have fled from Mubi.

Sources also add that it has been rumoured that some military officers are already deserting their posts in Yola.

Soldiers Retreat from Mubi…

Reports say that many Soldiers of the Nigerian military flee Mubi in Adamawa State to near by local governments as well as residents, due to the attack launched on that area yesterday by boko haram militants.

Sources reveal that the insurgents engaged FG Soldiers in a fierce battle as they invade Mubi towns, splitting in groups with some Boko Haram members advancing towards Mararraban Mubi and Vintim, the home town of Chief of Defence Staff, Air Marshal Alex Badeh, giving Nigerian troops a hot chase.

Residents of nearby towns also said they saw military vehicles zooming off towards Yola, the state capital, adding that several people might have been killed during the shooting spree that lasted almost two hours in Uba and other villages.

Meanwhile residents who fled confirmed that Mubi has been deserted and people have all fled into nearby bushes and hilltops, with Nigerian Soldiers retreating as well.

Attacks in Mubi, Residents Flee

Reports reaching us provide that suspected Boko haram fighters clashed with Federal Government troops, Wednesday, in Mubi, Adamawa State, despite ceasefire agreement between FG and the militants.

A resident told reporters that, “There is virtually not a single resident left in Mubi. Everybody has left to save their lives… People in thousands left the town on foot because all roads have been blocked by soldiers and it is not possible to leave by road.”

He also added that the battle is more fierce around the town’s military barracks.

 

Panic In Adamawa’s Second-Largest Town Mubi As B/HARAM Seizes Michika

Boko Haram insurgents appeared to have taken Michika, one of the major towns in the northern part of Adamawa State, yesterday.

They entered the town in the morning and took over many places apparently when security personnel reportedly fled on seeing the Boko Haram convoys.

Residents who fled the violence said well-armed militants are now patrolling the streets of the town.
Some of them are reported to have set up base at the emir’s palace.

The attack on Michika came two days after Boko Haram militants captured neighbouring Gulak, headquarters of Madagali Local Government Area.

A resident of Michika, who fled to the state capital Yola, said the insurgents slaughtered many young people and shot the elderly at close range.

“They killed several of my friends. They rounded dozens of young people, lay them on the ground and slit their throats while elderly people were shot at close range,” he said.

Chairman of Michika Local Government Area, Vandi Pavanza, confirmed the attack, saying the town was under siege as at yesterday and residents were fleeing to escape from the assailants. He added that soldiers were still fighting to repel the attack.

“The situation is beyond our control; we need prayers to overcome this problem. Honestly I have never seen something like this but military are currently doing their best to subdue the attackers,” Pavanza told Daily Trust.

Another resident told the BBC Hausa: “We were chatting with friends in front of our houses when we suddenly heard gunshots. We heard more shots for the second time, and then for the third time. We then started running helter-skelter.

“We run with our women and children into the bush. We put them in front of us, and we followed them from behind. I am now in the middle of the bush which I have never been to before in my life.

“Me and my friends are running without clothes. The situation was very bad. Despite the large population of Michika, you hardly find people now, because people have dispersed. Only God knows what happens to us next.”

The resident added that the insurgents met no security personnel in the town.
“There was not a single security personnel in the town: no army, no vigilantes. It is God who saved us out from the town and into the bush,” he said.

Other residents of Michika reported seeing military jets hovering over the town soon after the insurgents struck.

“Boko Haram members are presently hiding around emir’s palace since the arrival of a war plane around 10.50am. But the plane has remained in Hausari quarters, not where they converged,” one man said.

The takeover of Michika sparked panic in Mubi, which is the second largest town in Adamawa State, as residents began fleeing for fear of Boko Haram.

Pandemonium has also been reported in Uba and Mararaba Mubi. Residents of these towns and villages, including thousands of displaced people from Gwoza, Izge, Damboa, Madagali and Gulak, have begun fleeing to safer areas.

A health worker in Mubi, Abubakar Usman, said many residents were moving out to remote villages and other settlements to the south, in the direction of the state capital of Yola. But Daily Trust learnt that soldiers have mounted road blocks around Mubi, to stave off any attack on the town.