Fighter jets
were pounding Bama, Borno State’s second biggest town last night - in a
desperate bid to save it from Boko Haram insurgents.
The vicious
Islamist group that is fighting to create a Caliphate in the Northeast captured
the city on Monday night, hoisting its flag there.
The Defence
Headquarters (DHQ) ordered the Air Force to flush them out.
A top
military source, who spoke at 7:18pm, said: “Based on the order of the
DHQ, many fighter jets have been deployed in Bama to sack the insurgents from
their temporary occupation of the area.
“The jets
are to pound the insurgents into submission. So, aerial battle is in progress
now in Bama because the insurgents have blocked access to the town.”
Asked how
long the air strikes would last, the high-ranking source added: “Till the
insurgents surrender and vacate Bama. We hope to reclaim the town within 24 to
48 hours because we are dealing with an unorganised group.”
There were
fears last night that the insurgents might use Bama as a base to attack
Maiduguri, the state capital, which is less than 70 kilometres away.
But a top
military source, who described the capture of Bama as a “temporary setback”,
said the “devastated insurgents” regrouped Monday night and descended
heavily on Bama.
“The troops
tried to repel the insurgents but they were just too many. I think they had a
base in some villages nearby from where they launched their reprisals,” said
the source, who added:
“From
intelligence reports, the insurgents had seen heavy casualties in their camp in
their first encounter with troops at dawn on Monday. They had also put in place
a Plan B with which they used to attack Bama afresh at night.
“Our concern
is that the insurgents might harm the residents of Bama and destroy military,
police and security formations.
“For now,
reports have indicated that the situation in the town is tense. The insurgents
have established a firm control of the town. They are also prepared to declare
an Islamic Caliphate in the area.”
Responding
to a question, the source added: “There were casualties on both sides but we
cannot take stock now because the insurgents have occupied the place.
“You will
recall that early on Monday, troops killed more than 40 insurgents. The
reprisals led to fierce encounters with casualties on both sides.”
Military
chiefs were locked in a meeting last night on how to reclaim Bama from the
insurgents.
Security has
been tightened around Maiduguri following the fall of Bama.
Another
source said: “The fall of Bama poses danger to Maiduguri because under one or
two hours, the insurgents can launch fierce attacks on the state capital.
“This is why
there is a heavy security ring in and around Maiduguri.”
The DHQ
said a dust-to-dawn curfew had been imposed on Maiduguri to prevent
the insurgents from entering the city.
The DHQ
said: “The curfew in Maiduguri is from 7pm-6am, aimed at preventing
infiltration into Maiduguri metropolis by insurgents who suffered heavy
casualties.”
One security
source said up to 5,000 people had fled Bama.
Defence
spokesman Gen Chris Olukolade had not spoken on Bama at press time last night.
In a
“bungled” air strike, several troops were killed at the Bama armoury by a
fighter jet targeting the insurgents, according to a soldier on the ground.
The Boko
Haram fighters captured the remote hilly town of Gwoza, along the Cameroon
border, last month. Sect leader Abubakar Shekau declared Gwoza an Islamic
Caliphate.
Troops are
still battling to regain control of Gwoza.
“When we
started hearing gunshots, everybody was confused. There was firing from
different directions. We just ran to the outskirts of town,” Bukar Auwalu, a
trader who fled with his wife, three children and brother, said. “There were
military helicopters and a fighter jet. We slept in the bush on the outskirts
of town.”
A soldier
involved in the Bama clashes, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the
insurgents had targeted the armoury with heavy weapons, including tanks.
As troops
tried to repel the attack, they called in air reinforcements. But by the time
the fighter jet arrived, they had mostly lost the battle for this location. The
jet then bombed the area but accidentally killed everyone there – both Nigerian
troops and insurgents – the soldier said. “The situation is bad. We lost so
many of our men,” he added.
A local
farmer, Ibrahim Malu, said hundreds of residents had fled the town. He said he
had visited his farm before morning prayers when gunfire and explosions
erupted. He ran home, but by the time he got there his wife and children had
fled. “I still don’t know where they could be,” he said. “Two soldiers fled
with me. One of them didn’t even have shoes.”
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