Militant Islamist sect, Boko Haram, has renamed Mubi as
‘Madinatul Islam,” meaning the city of Islam.
The action is further confirmation that the sect was in
total control of the town which it recaptured last week after troops stationed
there withdrew. Boko Haram had earlier hoisted its flag in some parts of the
town, including the Palace of the Emir, which serves as its administration
headquarters.
On Monday, the sect announced the introduction of Sharia and
the amputation of 10 people in the town, the second largest in the state.
A trapped resident, Aliyu Bala, who disclosed the renaming
of Mubi on Tuesday, also said that the sect had set up check-points in
strategic parts of the community.
“They are keeping vigil in every nook and cranny of the town
and calling on residents who ran away to come back to their homes. They are
also asking those in communities in the four Local Government Areas which they
captured to return because their safety will be assured,” Bala added.
He said that despite the assurance that they would be better
protected under an Islamic Caliphate, some residents of Mubi, who stayed back
when the insurgents stormed the town, were sneaking out.
A lawyer, Sunday Wugira, who went to Maiha to
pick up his aged parents who fled to the village when Mubi was captured, also
confirmed that many trapped residents were secretly fleeing.
He said, ‘‘I was in Maiha a few hours ago, the plight of the
people I saw was simply beyond imagination. We were in a commercial bus when
some fleeing soldiers said we must adjust for them to get space in the bus.”
Salisu Baba, a resident of Uba, one of the captured
communities, said the insurgents also warned politicians not to
hold any election in the state.
“The insurgents don’t want any election. They have restated
their vow to capture the whole state in no distant time,” he added.
Baba said the insurgents assured residents of
free movement anytime of the day and the use of their motorcycles.
He said, “The insurgents have assured people of total
freedom and have been telling shop owners to open their shops threatening that
anyone who fails to open his shop will have the shop broken.
“Whenever the insurgents want any commodity, they pay for
it. This encouraged meat and tea sellers and others to open for
business.
“They provided security during the market day in Uba last
Thursday while promising to continue to give marketers and residents who come
to the area utmost security as long as they complied with Islamic rules.
“They also opened one of the filling stations belonging to
A.A Garba in Uba as motorists’ trooped out to buy petrol.”
Meanwhile, the state government has banned the use of
motorcycles in seven LGAs as part of measures to contain the security situation
in state.
A statement by Phineas Elisha, the director of Press and
Public Affairs to Governor Bala Ngilari, urged the public and security
operatives to ensure compliance.
The affected LGAs are Hong, Gombi, Song, Girei, Numan, Demsa
and Fufore.
In Nafada LGA of Gombe State, gunmen suspected to be Boko
Haram members on Tuesday killed 10 people.
It was learnt that they had earlier killed an unspecified
number of soldiers on duty at the checkpoint in Nafada.
A resident of the area told journalists on the telephone
that the attackers stormed the town around 11am in four Hilux vans and
motorcycles, wielding guns and shooting sporadically into the air.He said they
immediately set the Police station and the Local Government secretariat ablaze.
“The gunmen then went to the house of an Islamic cleric
named Adamu Misira and opened fire on him and nine other people that were there
with him, ” the resident who did not want his name in print said.
When contacted, the state Police Commissioner, Kudu Nma,
said he had yet to hear of the incident.
The Chief of Defence Staff, Air Chief Marshal Alex Badeh, on
Tuesday said that Nigeria was not helpless despite the continued onslaught
by Boko Haram.
He spoke with State House correspondents when he led service
chiefs to the Presidential Villa, Abuja.
Journalists had asked Badeh to react to the loss of his
hometown in Adamawa State to members of the sect and the burning of his house.
Badeh, who had earlier declined comment however changed his
mind when he was asked if the nation was helpless in the face of the renewed
onslaught.
The security chief said he was pained by any town lost to
the sect irrespective of whether it is his hometown or not.
He also said he carried the weight of the sect whenever any
house is burnt regardless of whether the house belonged to him or other
Nigerians.
Badeh said, “How can Nigeria be helpless? That is unfair. If
CDS loses his hometown, it is the same thing as losing Lagos. Any part of
Nigeria that is lost, the CDS carries the weight.
“It is immaterial whether it is my hometown, whether it is
my house that is burnt or it is Emeka’s house that is burnt. Whoever’s house is
burnt in Nigeria, the CDS is pained.”
He however did not reply when he was asked to respond to the
various calls for his removal.
He quickly rushed into his car amidst the confusion caused
by his orderly who engaged journalists in altercation while trying to keep them
away.
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