President Muhammadu Buhari Thursday in
Abuja ordered the service chiefs and the acting Inspector-General of
Police (IG), Mr. Mohammed Adamu, to deal ruthlessly with armed bandits
and kidnappers terrorising different parts of the country.
Present at the meeting aside the acting
IG, were the Chief of Defence Staff, General Gabriel Olonisakin; Chief
of Army Staff, Lt. Gen. Tukur Buratai; Chief of Naval Staff, Vice
Admiral Ibok-Ete Ekwe Ibas; and Chief of Air Staff, Air Marshal Sadiq
Abubakar.
Others were the National Security
Adviser, Maj-Gen. Babagana Monguno (rtd); Director-General of National
Intelligence Agency (NIA), Mr. Ahmed Rufai; Director-General, Department
of State Security Service (DSS), Mr. Yusuf Bichi; the Minister of
Interior, Lt. Gen. Abdulrahman Dambazzau (rtd); and the Minister of
Defence, Brig-Gen. Mansur Dan-Ali (rtd).
Bandits have in recent times, laid siege
to various parts of the country particularly Zamfara, Sokoto, Katsina
and Kaduna States in North-western Nigeria, wreaking havoc and sending
many to their early graves.
In the same vein, kidnappers have made
living harrowing for many Nigerians especially those plying Kaduna-Abuja
highway, Okene-Lokoja road, Benin-Ore expressway, among others,
waylaying travellers, kidnapping them and subjecting their families to
utter discomfort by demanding huge ransom.
However, Buhari who returned to Nigeria
on Tuesday night from trips to Jordan and United Arab Emirates (UAE),
convoked a security council meeting in the Presidential Villa over
worsening security crises bedeviling various parts of the country and
gave the heads of security agencies marching orders to ruthlessly deal
with criminals tormenting the lives of innocent citizens.
Briefing State House correspondents at
the end of the meeting, Olonisakin said the meeting reviewed existing
security strategy and simultaneously examined a new approach to be
adopted in combating security challenges confronting the country.
According to him, such a review and
examination bordered on strategy for tackling banditry, kidnap and other
security challenges facing Nigeria, adding that the president ordered
them to ruthlessly tackle the challenges with a sense of immediacy.
He said: “The security meeting we just
had with Mr. President today (yesterday) is to review the strategy that
we are adopting in confronting security issues in Zamfara State
especially and other places nationwide. And this review strategy is to
address all the issues, including kidnapping, banditry and other
associated issues confronting the nation and we are coming out with a
revised strategy to handle those challenges.
“Yeah, the marching order is for us to
deal with this issue immediately and ruthlessly and ensure that all
those bandits are immediately dealt with and all those issues that are
bordering on our security are properly addressed.”
Also briefing, the acting IGP said the menace of kidnapping on Abuja – Kaduna expressway had been effectively tackled, disclosing that several kidnappers had been arrested and the road is now safe for motorists.
Also briefing, the acting IGP said the menace of kidnapping on Abuja – Kaduna expressway had been effectively tackled, disclosing that several kidnappers had been arrested and the road is now safe for motorists.
According to him, the security patrol
team that is on duty every 24 hours on the road has had bloody
encounters with the kidnappers during which he said some of them had
been injured and others arrested.
He said: “I want to assure Nigerians
that Kaduna-Abuja roads are now safe. We have cleared the roads; we have
arrested a lot of kidnappers and in confrontation with some of them,
and some were fatally injured.
“So the road is cleared. Our patrol
teams, the combined security services that are patrolling the road are
constantly there 24 hours.”
IG’s submission that Abuja – Kaduna
highway is now safe for motorists and commuters was the fallout of the
launch of “Operation PUFF- ADDER” last week in the North-west region as a
security strategy conceived to dislodge both bandits and kidnappers in
the region.
The IG while briefing journalists on
Sunday on federal government’s decision to suspend all mining activities
in Zamfara State and its environs on April 7, described “Operation
PUFF- ADDER” as a combined security strategy aimed at reclaiming
territories under the control of criminals.
According to him, the strategy involved
raiding of the hide-outs of criminals, arresting perpetrators, bringing
them to justice and as well recovering illegal weapons in circulation
with the overall intention to guarantee the security of lives and
property.
He said: “As part of sustained efforts
to flush out, and permanently put an end to armed banditry and
criminality in Zamfara State in particular and the North-west in
general, the Nigeria Police Force in collaboration with the Nigerian
Military and other Security Services has commenced “Operation PUFF-
ADDER” which is a full scale security offensive against the bandits.
“The operation is aimed at reclaiming
every public space under the control of the bandits, arrest and bring to
book all perpetrators of violence in the area and their collaborators,
achieve a total destruction of all criminal camps and hideouts, mop up
all illicit weapons fueling the violence and attain a full restoration
of law and order in the affected communities.
“Our commitment at protecting the
sanctity of life and property is irrevocable, and we will not scale-down
the pressure on the armed bandits until they are totally flushed-out.”
Meanwhile, the House of Representatives
Thursday asked the president to appear before it and address Nigerians
on the spate of insecurity across the country.
The lawmakers threatened that failure by
the president to explain the issues they raised would confirm the
opinion of Nigerians that the administration had failed in its
responsibility to protect lives and property.
This demand was part of the resolutions
passed at the plenary when the lawmakers unanimously adopted a motion
moved by the member representing Gwer-East/Gwer-West Federal
Constituency in Benue State, Mr. Mark Gbillah.
The motion was titled, ‘Resurgence of
the Incessant and Annual Massacre of Innocent Nigerians across the
Country by Alleged Bandits and Killer Herdsmen, the Gradual Occupation
of Affected Communities by these Attackers and the Lack of Adequate
Rehabilitation and Relief Materials.’
Adopting the motion, which was not
debated, the lawmakers resolved to “request that the President and
Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces address the House and the entire
nation within 48 hours.”
According to the resolution, Buhari is expected to make a series of explanations to Nigerians.
They are, “His inability and the inability of his administration since inception to declare the killer herdsmen as terrorists to enable commensurate action against them by the Armed Forces.
They are, “His inability and the inability of his administration since inception to declare the killer herdsmen as terrorists to enable commensurate action against them by the Armed Forces.
“The inability of the Armed Forces under
his watch to stop the recurring death of scores of innocent Nigerians
annually from systemic attacks by killer herdsmen and alleged bandits,
and the gradual occupation of the affected communities by these herdsmen
despite countless assurances and statements by him, promising to stop
these attacks.”
Others are, “The inability of NEMA under his watch to immediately provide relief materials and rehabilitation of affected communities in line with their statutory mandate, in spite of the N10billion he announced had been provided in this regard and what immediate intervention his administration intends to provide to affected communities and how soon.”
Others are, “The inability of NEMA under his watch to immediately provide relief materials and rehabilitation of affected communities in line with their statutory mandate, in spite of the N10billion he announced had been provided in this regard and what immediate intervention his administration intends to provide to affected communities and how soon.”
The lawmakers resolved that they would
“conclude along with other Nigerians, if the president fails to respond
to the aforementioned queries within 48 hours, that he and his
administration are incapable of permanently curtailing the incessant
killing of innocent Nigerians by killer herdsmen and the occupation of
their land, and have failed in their primary, constitutional
responsibility of ensuring the security and welfare of the citizens of
Nigeria.”
The lawmakers further resolved to constitute an ad hoc committee to interface with the Presidency regarding the queries.
They also resolved to engage with the Minister of Defence, Mansur
Dan-Ali; Chief of Defence Staff and other Service Chiefs; Chairman and
Executive Vice-Chairman of NCC, and other stakeholders.The lawmakers further resolved to constitute an ad hoc committee to interface with the Presidency regarding the queries.
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