The Defence Headquarters on
Tuesday said soldiers of the Multi-National Joint Task Force have
arrested unspecified number of Boko Haram attackers who had been wounded
in the course of the renewed bombardments of their camps by the
military.
A statement on Tuesday by the Director of Defence Information,
Maj.-Gen. Chris Olukolade, said the “captured terrorists” had also made
useful information concerning their involvements in the insurgency in
the North-East of the country while equally pleading for forgiveness.
The statement read in part, “Scores of wounded terrorists
who escaped from various camps under the fire of security forces have
been captured in the fringes of Lake Chad. The captured terrorists some
of whom are fatally wounded are already making useful statements to
interrogators of the Multi-National Joint Task Force. Others were
captured by troops in locations around Dikwa, Cross Kauwa, Kukawa and
Alargarmo.
“In their confessions, it was revealed that some of the camps have
been disbanded following the directive of their clerics who declared
that the operation of the sect had come to an end as the mission could
no longer be sustained. The terrorists who are giving useful
information as to the locations of their remnant forces, are full of
apologies and pleas for their lives to be spared promising to
cooperate.”
The statement added that the captured terrorists said starvation
had made their violent campaigns difficult while the wounded members of
the sect could no longer access medical attention.
It said, “They confirmed that starvation was a major problem in
addition to ceaseless bombardments on the camp locations even when they
kept relocating. They also confirm that several members of the group
have been wounded and no treatment was forth coming. Troops have
continued their assault on other locations across the states covered by
the state of emergency.”
The Defence Headquarters warned members of the public, who had
cultivated the habit of sight-seeing in the camps, where the insurgents
had recently been dislodged, to desist from such act.
“Members of the public, who have started visiting to engage in
sight seeing in some dislodged camps and fringes of forests such as
Sambisa and others have been warned to desist from doing so as the
tendency will no more be condoned where operations are still ongoing,”
it added.
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