Monday, 1 April 2013

JTF kills 14 Boko Haram terrorists in Kano

Pictures 1 & 2:  AK 47 rifles and   bomb making materials  recovered from the hideouts of terrror suspects in Kano on Sunday. Picture 3: One of the razed buildings used as a hideout by the suspects.
Operatives of the  Joint Task Force on Sunday averted another  major attack  by  terrorists  in Kano by raiding  their  hideouts  at  Unguwa Uku area of the ancient city.
The operatives, acting on a tip off,  were said to have raced to the area around 4am  and intercepted a Volkswagen Golf, primed with explosives, which  some terrorists had wanted to use and wreck havoc during the Easter celebration in the city.
Residents of the area  said  the soldiers thereafter  invaded a compound housing the suspected terrorists but were greeted with  explosions.They added that the operatives who were not deterred exchanged gunfire with the terrorists for about four hours.
The spokesperson of JTF in Kano, Ikedi Iweha, was quoted as saying that the task force killed 14 Boko Haram suspects in the raid.

  One of the residents said   it was unclear if most of the terrorists were killed by the Improvised Explosive Devices  detonated by them or by the operatives.
He added that bodies  were seen being  carried out of  one of the   buildings in the compound raided by the operatives while 14 AK 47 rifles, 10 peak milk-size  IEDs, four drums of 50- litre  primed explosives  and   51 other items  in small drums were recovered.
The houses  were  thereafter  demolished while the corpses were  taken  to a morgue.
Security operatives  said that one of the terrorists’ top commanders  whose  name was not given was later  arrested .
The Brigade Commander 3 motorised Brigade, Bukavu Barracks, Kano, Brig.-Gen.Iliyasu  Abba,  confirmed the incident.
 “My men on search operations in the wee hours of this(Sunday) morning at Layin Yan’awaki, Ungwa –Uku general area   suddenly came   under fire from  terrorists that triggered a gunfire,” he  said while conducting journalists round the scene.
 “It was an opportunity to demonstrate our superior fire power, and the gallant  officers and men gave a good account of themselves but unfortuanately we lost one of our soldiers and another one  was injured.”
As of 4pm on Sunday,  the area was still  cordoned off  by security operatives.
  Many panic-stricken Christians  could  not summon courage to attend Easter  service in their churches  despite the  high  presence of security operatives in the metropolis
Churches like  Our Lady of Fatima,   St Louis,    St Thomases’,  St Stephen’s, St
Georges and Holy Trinity had  low turn out of worshippers while those in   Hotoro, Mariri and Badawa areas did not open.
Before the raid,   JTF operatives and  policemen   had been  deployed  in  strategic locations in the city.  Armoured Personnel Carriers  were also seen  patrolling  the flash points.
In Jos, Plateau State, the much-advertised   rally   to mark the end of the  Easter festivities did not hold  as  church leaders  advised their followers to go back to their homes and celebrate quietly.
Many of them had  gathered in front of the headquarters of the Church Of Christ In Nigeria to begin the procession that would have terminated at the Rwang Pam Stadium when  they were given the advice.
The rally, which was organised by the state branch of the Christian Association of Nigeria, was abandoned after the police  warned against it.
There had been clashes in the suburbs of the  city , which had necessitated a high security alert.
However,  in his Sunday Easter message at the Our Lady of Fatima Catholic Church, Archbishop of Jos, Most Rev. Ignatius  Kaigama, urged Christians not to see the end of the Lenten period as a time to go back to their old ways, but to continue to allow the spirit of   Christ to be in them.
He admonished them to imbibe the spirit of forgiveness, which the period signifies.
“All the troubles we have in Nigeria is because we have not allowed the spirit of Christ to take charge of our lives. Therefore, as we celebrate Easter, we should look up at that Cross of Calvary, where Christ hung more than 2,000 years ago and reflect on the essence of that sacrifice,” the cleric said.
Meanwhile, the   Commissioner of Police in the state,    Mr. Chris Olakpe,  has called on warring parties to shun hatred and to come  out  for genuine dialogue in order to  curb  the growing insecurity in the state.
Olakpe   stated this on Sunday  in Jos when   Isoko people living  in Jos hosted him.
Earlier,the President of Isoko Development Union    in  Plateau State, Mr. Ezekiel Udubrae,  had said the  Isoko  would  avail the commissioner  with any information that would  enable him succeed   in the state.

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