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Sunday, 11 May 2014
Abubakar Shekau is Title, Not Identity, Says Military
Don't blame abduction on FG, Oronto Douglas tells
Washington Post
Yemi Adebowale and Adebiyi Adedapo
The Director of Defence Information, Brigadier General Chris
Olukolade has said that Abubakar Shekau, known as the
leader of the terrorist Boko-Haram sect is more of a title
than a name.
In a related development, President Goodluck Jonathan’s
Special Adviser on Research, Strategy and Documentation,
Oronto Douglas yesterday in an interview with The
Washington Post said “it is not helpful to heap blames
upon the Nigerian government as it struggles to rescue
more than 200 schoolgirls kidnapped in Borno State by the
terrorist Boko Haram sect.”
Olukolade spoke on “Shekau” in Abuja, during the maiden
press briefing of the newly constituted National Information
Centre, comprising the information officers of the State
Security Service, Mrs. Marylyn Ogar; the Nigerian Police
Force, Mr. Frank Mba; the Directorate of Defence
Information Olukolade and the Director General of the
National orientation Agency (NOA) Mr. Mike Omeri.
He also said that many of the information provided to the
military about the abduction of the schoolgirls were
misleading, adding that many of the information were
concocted to unsettle the populace.
"Talking about the personality that has been presenting
himself as head of that group, besides knowing the fact that
the term Shekau is more of a title than a name, there are
many issues around it that makes it still fake. I don't want
to get into the details of that," Olukolade said.
He added that several pictures being circulated on the
Internet were recycled for mischievous purposes, as he said
some of the pictures were activities of what took place in
Central African Republic (CAR) and it is being presented as
a recent event in Nigeria.
According to him, the terrorists want to unsettle the
populace with concocted images, and do anything that will
promote fear. The phase we are in with them now, is to
engage in activities that will make the populace so scared
to the extent of almost losing confidence in government and
its institutions and also targeted at a situation whereby the
institutions of state will be so stressed and warn out.
“We want to assure Nigerians that the institutions of state
are still functioning and still capable of assuring them their
security, regardless of the activities of the terrorists," he
said.
Giving updates on the search for the kidnapped Chibok
girls, Olukolade said efforts have been more concerted in
conjunction with Multi-national Joint Task Force.
"A the moment, we have two divisions of the Nigerian army
infantry devoted on looking for these girls, and they are all
operating in the nethermost part of the federation
contiguous to various borders. There are also other military
and security agencies located close to border location in
the north and south. All our border locations have been
activated to operate at their optimum in looking out for
these children.”
He added that The Nigerian Air Force has flown over 350
sorties with a view to ensuring that not just surveillance but
air patrol is sustained on a near 24-hour basis over
locations that information has indicated as likely position of
these girls.
"The facilities of the Nigerian Army signals as well as all
the communication facilities of the Nigerian Police and all
the services have been devoted in coordinating this search
and ensuring that information gets back to the control post
where all the operations are being monitored and guided,”
Olukolade said.
In the interview with Washington Post, Douglas called for
greater international assistance in the country's struggle
against terrorism.
"The Nigerian government is doing all it can - everything in
its power - in collaboration with its allies to ensure that our
daughters, the girls, are brought back home," said Douglas,
who was on a visit to Washington.
The perceived slowness of Abuja's response to the mass
abduction has sparked protests both inside and outside
Nigeria. Douglas said such criticisms "are normal for
democracies," though he did not say whether they were
justified.
"This is not about politics; it is about the protection of
human lives. In an attempt to rescue the girls, we must not
also endanger their lives," Douglas says.
Douglas pointed to the transnational threat posed by Boko
Haram, whose base of operations in Nigeria's northeast
extends across borders into three other countries. "The
days when nations act alone are over," he said. The United
States and other Western countries have promised technical
assistance in the hunt for the missing girls, and Douglas
appealed for more help. "Terrorism is very new in Nigeria.
You need international support," he said.
He finds it particularly galling that his government has
come in for the sort of criticism it has faced since the
disappearance of the Chibok schoolgirls. “When a terrorist
bomb goes off in Afghanistan, they don't blame the Afghan
government. So, why the reverse with Nigeria?" Don't see
the Nigerian government as the problem. Don't blame
Nigeria going forward. The blame game should be taken to
the back burner," he insisted.
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