President Muhammadu Buhari says all Local Government Areas (LGAs)
previously controlled by the Boko Haram/ISWAP terrorists have been
reclaimed.
The President made this known in a nationwide broadcast on Friday to mark the country’s Democracy Day.
According
to President Buhari, indigenes in Borno, Adamawa and Yobe affected by
the insurgency, hitherto forced to seek a living in areas far from their
ancestral homes have all returned.
The president assured
Nigerians of his administration’s commitment to silence the remnants of
terrorists and bandits operating from the fringes of the Lake Chad
Basin.
While regretting the recent killings in Borno and Katsina
States, he vowed that measures are already in place to avoid
reoccurrence in the future.
The president, however, called on local authorities to support the military in fishing out these criminal elements.
“In
the area of security, we remain unshaken in our resolve to protect our
national infrastructure including on-shore and off-shore oil
installations, secure our territorial waters and end piracy in the Gulf
of Guinea,” he said.
“Ending insurgency, banditry and other
forms of criminality across the nation is being accorded appropriate
priorities and the men and women of the Armed Forces of Nigeria have
considerably downgraded such threats across all geo-political zones.
“All
the Local Governments that were taken over by the Boko Haram insurgents
in Borno, Yobe and Adamawa have long been recovered and are now
occupied by indigenes of these areas who were hitherto forced to seek a
living in areas far from their ancestral homes.
“The total
collapse of the economies of these areas, which constituted a threat to
our food security, has also been reversed with the gradual recovery of
farming and other economic activities.
“I regret recent sporadic
incidents with tthe ratragicoss of lives in Katsina and Borno States as a
result of criminals taking advantage of COVID-19 restrictions. Security
Agencies will pursue the perpetrators and bring them to swift justice.
“I
must implore state and local governments to revamp their intelligence
assets so that the Securit agencies can nip in the bud any planned
attacks in remote rural areas. I send my heartfelt condolences to all
the relatives and communities affected.”
Recall that Chief of
Army Staff, Lt. Gen. Tukur Buratai, had earlier this week met with the
president after over two months on the frontlines in the northeast.
Although the COAS admitted that the “fight is still ongoing”, he revealed that “tremendous successes” have been recorded.
“The troops are putting in their best and that has resulted in the tremendous successes we are recording,” he said.
“The
fight is still ongoing and over 1429 of this Boko Haram terrorists have
been neutralised and we have arrested over 166 Boko Haram terrorist
informants, their spies, couriers on logistics and their coordinators in
the villages, the towns and forests.”
Lt. Gen. Buratai's stands
were echoed by Sen. Ali Ndume who acknowledged that the COAS' stay in
the Northeast significantly impacted on the fight against Boko Haram
insurgency.
Ndume, who is the Chairman of Senate Committee on
Nigerian Army made this known in Maiduguri on Monday while speaking with
newsmen.
“Definitely the coming of COAS has made visible
difference. He has taken a break after two months, to re-strategize
because the remaining areas are delicate, because they are mixed with
civilians being held hostage by the insurgents,” he said.
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