Boko Haram kills 300, abducts 11 more girls
Boko Haram leader, Abubakar Shekau
| credits: saharareporters.com
| credits: saharareporters.com
IN
 another daring operation, members of the terrorist Islamic sect, Boko 
Haram, on Monday night killed about 300 people in Gamboru Ngala, Borno 
State. Gamboru Ngala is a border town with Cameroon.
The Boko Haram insurgents also abducted 
11 more girls in Warabe and Wala communities in the Chibok Local 
Government Area of Borno State late on Monday.
The insurgents reportedly drove into Gamboru Ngala in armoured vehicles.
It was learnt that the insurgents, who 
seemed to have targeted a local market, shot sporadically at traders at 
the market before proceeding into the town to wreak more havoc.
Gamboru is situated along 
Nigeria-Cameroon border and is the administrative headquarters of the 
Ngala Local Government Area of Borno State. It is about 200 kilometres  
from Maiduguri, the state capital city.
Senator Ahmed Zannah, who is 
representing the area in the Senate, confirmed the killings. He said the
 invaders spent about 12 hours wreaking havoc on defenceless Nigerians.
He revealed that several other persons 
were injured in the attack, while almost all the houses and shops in the
 town were burnt down.
The senator, who spoke in a BBC 
Hausa report monitored in Maiduguri on Tuesday, said many people were 
wounded, while surviving victims rendered homeless as thousands of 
houses and shops were burnt by the rampaging gunmen.
He claimed that the attackers were armed
 with dangerous weapons comprising Armoured Personnel Carrier, 
Improvised Explosive Devices, petrol bombs, assault rifles and Rocket 
Propelled Launchers.
“The attackers stormed the communities 
in the night when residents were still sleeping, setting ablaze houses 
and shooting residents who tried to escape from the fire,’’ he said.
He added, “About 300 persons were 
confirmed dead after the incident, with several others injured. Almost 
all the houses in the communities were destroyed by the hoodlums who 
threw IEDs at the buildings.
“My brother who was at the scene of the 
attack told me that the actual number of the dead cannot be ascertained 
but at least they are up to 300. In fact, as he spoke he wept following 
the high number of the dead bodies which littered the market.”
According to him, the security forces 
earlier deployed in the area, had moved to the Lake Chad axis when they 
received intelligence report that some gunmen were sighted with abducted
 schoolgirls moving to the area.
“It was just an hour after their 
withdrawal that the terrorists invaded the town, shooting everyone at 
sight and setting buildings on fire. So far 200 vehicles and thousands 
of houses, shops and an outfit of the Nigerian Customs Service, (NCS) 
were all burnt”, he explained.
A local government official who declined identification also confirmed the casualty figure.
“It is really a terrible situation, we 
had wanted to rush relief materials to the area to provide temporary 
succour to the victims. But we were prevailed upon by security agents to
 shelve our plans for security reasons,” the official said.
More girls seized
The 11 girls were reportedly seized  in Warabe and Wala when gunmen invaded the communities.
Warabe is about 160 kilometres away from Maiduguri, the state capital.
The community is located on the 
outskirts of Gwoza town, which had witnessed a series of deadly attacks 
by suspected terrorists in recent times.
Police sources and residents confirmed the kidnapping of the girls, said to be aged between 12 and 15.
A resident of Warabe, who said he had 
since relocated to Gwoza, Ishaku Bremcha, said through the phone on 
Tuesday, “There was a twin ambush by gunmen last night along Guduf-Gava 
route of Gwoza Hills. The gunmen came through the settlements of Hwa’a, 
Chikedeh, and Guduf-Wala hills down to Wala Kasa, and proceeded to Dure 
village, west of Gwoza town with 11 abducted teenagers into Sambisa 
Forest last night.
“The abductors did not inflict injury or
 kill any of us in Warabe and Wala, but took away 11 of our young 
daughters into the forest, after warning us not to report the 
kidnappings.”
The Borno State Commissioner of Police, 
Tanko Lawal, could not be reached for confirmation because GSM lines to 
Maiduguri were inaccessible.
 But a top police officer, who spoke on 
the condition of anonymity, said some armed hoodlums attacked two 
villages in the Gwoza council area “and abducted about a dozen 
teenagers.”
A resident of Warabe, Mallam Bello Umar,
 who spoke to journalists in Maiduguri,  said, “A group of terrorists 
invaded Warabe village on Sunday night, abducted 11 of our teenage girls
 and carted them away with our foodstuffs and livestock.
“As I am talking to you now, I have run 
to Gwoza Council headquarters, and even in Gwoza, we cannot move around 
easily due to the fear of the terrorists.
“The situation is so pathetic that 
almost everyone in Gwoza congregates at a safer zone close to the 
council secretariat where there is enough presence of security 
personnel.”
Umar said the gunmen, numbering over 20 and armed with AK-47 rifles, stormed the village but that they did not kill anybody.
“They simply abducted the 11 teenage 
girls before fleeing towards the hilly border areas between Gwoza and 
Cameroon Republic,” he added.
Reuters also quoted another 
resident of Warabe, Lazarus Musa, as saying on Tuesday that gunmen 
invaded the village and abducted the girls.
“They were many, and all of them carried
 guns. They came in two vehicles painted in army colour. They started 
shooting in our village,” Musa reportedly said.
A police source, who could not be named,
 also said the Warabe girls were taken away in trucks, along with looted
 livestock and food.
UN warns Shekau
The seizure of the 11 girls came as the 
world body, the United Nations, warned the Boko Haram leader, Abubakar 
Shekau, against selling the about 200 girls kidnapped from the 
Government Secondary School, Chibok, Borno State.
Shekau on Monday released a video in 
which he claimed that the girls, abducted from their hostels on April 
14, were in his custody and threatened to sell them because he believed 
the pupils should not be in school but in their husbands’ houses.
The UN, according to a report by Reuters, warned Boko Haram that selling the girls would be tantamount to slavery, a practice prohibited by international law.
The UN human rights spokesman, Rupert 
Colville, at a news briefing in Geneva, said, “We warn the perpetrators 
that there is an absolute prohibition against slavery and sexual slavery
 in international law. These can under certain circumstances constitute 
crimes against humanity.
“That means anyone responsible can be 
arrested, charged, prosecuted and jailed at any time in the future. So 
just because they think they are safe now, they won’t necessarily be in 
two years, five years or 10 years’ time.”
Any buyer could also be held liable, 
Colville said, noting that enslaved girls were likely to be exposed to 
“continuous physical, psychological, economic and sexual violence” and 
that forced marriage could have a “devastating” impact on victims.
“The power differentials between girls 
and their ‘spouses’ are likely to undermine all autonomy, all freedom of
 will and expression of the girls. The situation they will be in will be
 tantamount to slavery, or slavery-like practices within the so-called 
marriage,” he said.
The UN High Commissioner for Human 
Rights, Navi Pillay, had written to President Goodluck Jonathan on April
 28, urging him to spare no effort to ensure the girls’ safe return.
Any rescue attempt must be made in line 
with international human rights standards, Colville said, noting 
previous “allegations of excessive use of force by the Nigerian military
 in anti-Boko Haram operations.”
The girls were picked from their school by insurgents dressed in army uniform and drove trucks painted in military colour.
 Jonathan accepts US military offer
The Presidency, meanwhile, said on  
Tuesday that President Goodluck Jonathan had accepted an offer made by 
the US President Barack Obama to deploy American security experts and 
equipment in Nigeria to assist in locating the schoolgirls abducted from
 Government Secondary School, Chibok, Borno State, on April 14.
Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Dr. Reuben Abati, said this in a statement on Tuesday.
Abati said the offer of assistance was 
conveyed to Jonathan by the US Secretary of State, John Kerry, in a 
telephone conversation he initiated on behalf of Obama.
He said shortly after the telephone 
conversation, the President also met with security chiefs in 
continuation of efforts aimed at rescuing the schoolgirls.
Abati said the President approved some of the recommendations made during the meeting for further actions.
The statement read, “President Goodluck 
Jonathan Tuesday welcomed and accepted a definite offer of help from the
 United States of America in the ongoing effort to locate and rescue the
 girls abducted from the Government Secondary School, Chibok three weeks
 ago.
“The offer from President Barack Obama, 
which was conveyed to President Jonathan by the United States Secretary 
of State, Mr. John Kerry, in a telephone conversation which began at 
15.30 hours today, includes the deployment of U.S. security personnel 
and assets to work with their Nigerian counterparts in the search and 
rescue operation.
“Mr. Kerry assured President Jonathan 
that the United States is wholly committed to giving Nigeria all 
required support and assistance to save the abducted girls and bring the
 reign of terror unleashed on parts of the country by Boko Haram to an 
end.
“Thanking Mr. Kerry for the call and 
offer of further assistance, President Jonathan told him that Nigeria’s 
security agencies who were already working at full capacity to find and 
rescue the abducted girls would appreciate the deployment of American 
counter-insurgency know-how and expertise in support of their efforts.
“After speaking with the United States 
Secretary of State, President Jonathan today met with the Chief of 
Defence Staff, Service Chiefs and heads of national security agencies in
 continuation of the national efforts to find and rescue the abducted 
girls.
“The President received updates on the ongoing search and rescue effort, and gave approval for recommended further actions.”
‘FG’ll find the missing girls’
The President however also said on 
Tuesday that the abducted Chibok schoolgirls would be rescued and 
reunited with their parents.
Jonathan, who spoke while inaugurating a
 presidential committee on the rescue of the abducted Chibok students at
 the Presidential Villa, said the Federal Government would do everything
 to rescue the girls. The committee is chaired by Brig.-Gen. Ibrahim 
Sabo.
Curiously, the President’s wife, 
Patience, had declared on Monday that “no girl is missing” and that if 
the girls were missing at all the Governor of Borno State, Kassim 
Shetima, should search for them.
The President said, “I am appreciative 
of the fact that this sad incident has attracted global outrage. This is
 a clear testimony to the fact that humanity can come together and stand
 as one against evil, no matter how it is presented.
“This is the time when we must bond 
together beyond all political, religious or regional divide against our 
common enemy. We must remain vigilant and be ready to assist security 
agencies and authorities at all time.
“We must keep supporting the families who for seeking education for their daughters are undergoing untold pains at this moment.
“Let me assure the families and our dear
 daughters that in conjunction with international community, government 
will do everything possible to get our girls back.”
The President clarified that the committee was neither a judicial committee nor an administrative panel.
Meanwhile, representatives of the Borno State Government and the UN were absent from the inauguration.
While the state government was asked to 
nominate two representatives, preferably women, the UN was asked to 
nominate one representative.
The committee’s terms of reference 
include: to liaise with the Borno State Government and establish the 
circumstances leading to the school remaining open for boarding students
 when other schools were closed; to liaise with relevant authorities and
 the parents of the missing girls to establish the actual number and 
identities of the girls abducted; and to interface with the Security 
Services and Borno State Government to ascertain how many of the missing
 girls have returned;
Others are to mobilise the surrounding 
communities and the general public on citizen support for a rescue 
strategy and operation; to articulate a framework for a 
multi-stakeholder action for the rescue of the missing girls; and to 
advise the Federal Government on any matter incidental to the terms of 
reference.
 North-East leaders at the Villa
Meanwhile, some elders from the 
North-East part of the country, led by a former Minister of Finance, 
Mallam Adamu Ciroma, met behind closed doors with the President on 
Tuesday in continuation of efforts to end insurgency in the zone.
Three states of the zone, Adamawa, Borno
 and Yobe are currently under emergency rule, declared by Jonathan in 
May 2013, following escalating violence.
Those who attended the meeting did not speak with journalists at the end of the consultation that lasted for about two hours.
On the delegation were Prof. Jubril 
Aminu, Alhaji Shettima Mustapha, Ambassador Babangana Kingibe, Alhaji 
Ibrahim Bunu, Alhaji Khalifa Yusuf and Alhaji Muhammed Kirfi, among 
others.
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