Members of the violent Islamic sects, Boko Haram, on Monday
attacked Maiduguri and Damaturu, the capital towns of troubled Borno and Yobe
states, and killed several people.
The insurgents also sacked police stations in the towns and
shot at a Nigerian Air Force jet even as they attempted to take over the
Government House in Damaturu.
But the military reportedly put up a fierce battle to avoid
losing the seat of power to the insurgents. And Governor Ibrahim Gaidam later
issued a statement to commend the gallantry of the soldiers for successfully
defending the Government House.
In the attacks on the two state capitals, six were said to
have been killed in Maiduguri where female suicide bombers attacked shops in
the Monday Market while the casualty figure for Damaturu, where insurgents
reportedly fired consistently for hours, was not known as of the time of this
report.
In Damaturu, the insurgents attacked a police station and
opened fire on an air force fighter jet circling the attacked area, witnesses
said.
The insurgents, sources told our correspondent, had arrived
in the Yobe State capital as early as 4.00am from Gujba and that they started
shooting sporadically as soon as they entered the city thus forcing many
residents to flee into the bushes.
Many residents of the town in areas such as Pawari and
Byepass immediately abandoned their abodes and fled.
Gujba is in the south-eastern part of the town.
A security source who preferred anonymity said the
insurgents, numbering over one hundred, attacked the Police Mobile Unit where
they exchanged gunfire with the police on duty and succeeded in sending the policemen
away.
The administrative block of the Yobe State University and
that of the state radio corporation and the Police Mobile Base, all located
along the path of the insurgents were said to have been set ablaze.
The witness said, “The military jet has to be deployed to
push the insurgents back as the situation is now under control and the entire
town has been cordoned off.
“The casualties cannot be counted for now but it is massive;
the insurgents were overwhelmed and they suffered a lot of death but few police
officers and civilians were also killed in the crossfire.”
In the Maiduguri attack, six persons were killed, including
the two female suicide bombers who detonated explosive devices at the popular
Monday Market.
Witnesses and security sources said the first explosion
occurred around 11:20am at one of the entrances of the market when a female
suicide bomber, who refused to submit herself for security check, detonated the
explosives strapped to her body.
Three persons and the suicide bomber were said to have died
in the first explosion.
“She (the female suicide bomber) refused to submit herself
to members of the civilian JTF who were conducting checks at the market and
therefore detonated the explosives on her,” a witness told our correspondent.
Another eyewitness said, “The youth vigilante pushed her
aside telling her to leave the market if she was not ready to be checked and it
was at this time the bomb on her exploded, tearing her into pieces and cutting
off the arm of the Civilian JTF.”
Just as this was happening, a second female suicide bomber
ran into a shop and was dragged out by the shop owners and in the process the
bomb on her exploded, claiming her life and that of the unfortunate shop owner.
“She ran into a shop with the explosives on her and while
the shop owner was dragging her out, a bomb exploded on her,” a security source
said.
The incident caused panic in the metropolis as parents
rushed to fetch their children from schools while businesses promptly shut
their doors.
The security source told our correspondent further that “one
of the female suicide bombers arrested revealed to the youth vigilante group
that there were 52 female suicide bombers currently prowling the Maiduguri
Township.
He said the female suicide bombers were specially
commissioned to attack high density areas in the town.
Analysts believed on Monday that the attack on Damaturu and
Yobe represented a total breakdown of law and order in the North-East as the
insurgents had hitherto raided remote and unmanned villages and communities.
A resident of Damaturu, who spoke to our correspondent on
the phone, said, “We were woken up by sound of gunshots and explosions and up
till now (8:30am) we cannot leave our homes as we are still hearing gunshots
though less deafening than about two hours ago.
“Everyone is indoor and our children are all at home with
us, no one dares go out.”
In Damaturu, the insurgents while shouting “Allahu Akbar”
reportedly moved towards the Government House in an apparent effort to take
over the seat of government
But the Yobe State governor, Alhaji Ibrahim Gaidam, later
issued a statement, asking the people of the state to be vigilant and fish out
any member of the dreaded sect that might be hiding among them.
The governor in the statement by his spokesman, Mallam
Abdullahi Bego, on Monday afternoon, said, “Early this morning, insurgents and
terrorists suspected to be members of Boko Haram launched attacks on Damaturu,
the Yobe State capital.
“His Excellency Governor Ibrahim Gaidam, who is on official
assignment to Abuja at the moment, was briefed on the situation by heads of the
law enforcement agencies on the ground in Damaturu.
“The governor has condemned the attack as heinous and
barbaric. He has also expressed appreciation to the security forces who worked
very hard on the ground and from the air to repel the attack and force many of
the attackers to flee. As a result of their efforts, Damaturu remains firmly
under government control.
“The governor has also been told that the security effort is
still ongoing. Security agents will continue to track and pursue any remnants
of the attackers who might still be hiding in town.”
Gaidam asked the residents of Damaturu and other towns in
the state to continue to remain vigilant and pray to Almighty Allah for His
intervention, insisting that the prayers offered so far have been “significant
to the success that the security forces recorded today.”
He also directed hospital authorities to provide adequate
support to innocent victims of the attack.
A military source said if the military had not put up a
determined fight, the insurgents had planned to take over the military and
security facilities in the town thus the control of ammunition and machinery
deployed in the state to fight the insurgents.
Friday last week, insurgents blasted the Kano Central Mosque
where the Emir of Kano normally led the Jamaat prayer, killing no fewer than
120 persons with over 200 sustaining injuries.
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