The Nigerian Army has officially declared one officer and 45 soldiers
missing in a major Boko Haram attacks five weeks ago.
Consequently, the Army authorities have formally informed the
families of the 46 personnel of the fate of their loved ones and
requested that their next of kin forward bank details for onward
remittance of accrued payments, military sources say.
The sources said the declaration and notification were contained in a
November 20 notice sent by M. Jimoh, the new commander of the Nigerian
Army 145 Task Force Battalion in Damasak, Borno State.
Mr. Jimoh, a lieutenant colonel, sent the signal to the 145 Battalion
rear base in Ohafia, Abia State, and copied the Army 7 Division
Headquarters in Maiduguri and 82 Division Garrison in Enugu.
Also copied were 5 Battalion in Kano; 20 Battalion in Serti, Taraba
State; 103 Battalion in Enugu and 119 Battalion in Malam Fatori, Borno
State.
Also in receipt of the signal were 143 Infantry Battalion for special
forces in Borno State; 144 Battalion in Asa, Abia State; and 146
Battalion in Calabar.
Each of the battalions copied in the signal had soldiers that were part of the 83 missing.
Mr. Jimoh recently replaced K. Yusuf, a lieutenant colonel who was the commander of the 145 Task
Force Battalion who was among the missing soldiers.
The admission by the army that 46 personnel are missing came exactly
five weeks after the soldiers were dislodged from their base in
Gashigar, Borno State, by Boko Haram operatives.
The troops were on deployment in Gashigar, which sits on the
northernmost edge of Borno State, as part of the ‘Operation Gama Aiki’
aimed at displacing insurgents hibernating around the Nigerian border
with Niger and Chad. They were manning the Forward Operation Base there when Boko Haram
operatives pushed towards them with superior firepower in the evening of
October 16, senior military sources familiar with the encounter say.
After initial resistance, the troops soon abandoned their base and
scampered for safety. At dawn on October 17, the leadership of the
Nigerian Army was informed that Boko Haram attacked the troops when they
jumped into River Yobe, where the sect opened fire and left unknown number of them fatally wounded.
Twenty-two of the fleeing soldiers were rescued by the Nigerien
troops and transported to a hospital in Diffa, southern Niger, for
treatment, the Army also learnt at the time.
Yet, for several days, the spokesman for the Army, Sani Usman, maintained that the report was false.
But on the same day that he spoke, the Theatre Commander of Operation
Lafiya Dole in the northeast, Lucky Irabor, a major-general, claimed
only 39 soldiers went missing.
The Army also opened a secret inquiry into the attack after some brigade commanders raised questions about the conduct of the soldiers.
For instance, the commanders said it was difficult to explain how
utility trucks were used to dispossess soldiers of their armoured
vehicles especially when the soldiers said they were alerted in their
various positions.
Senior military officials also found it curious that some of the
soldiers were rescued by their Nigerien counterparts with their bullets
still largely unspent.
“If they actually came under attack while they were fully at alert,
then they should have exhausted their ammunition before taking to their
heels,” the source said. “At least that much should be clear.”
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