
Borno State Governor Kashim Shettima
| credits: www.bornostate.gov.ng
| credits: www.bornostate.gov.ng
Borno
State Governor Kashim Shettima on Monday lamented the terror
attacks on communities in the North-East and declared that Boko Haram
members were better armed and motivated than Nigerian troops.
Briefing State House correspondents
shortly after meeting with President Goodluck Jonathan and service
chiefs over Saturday’s insurgents attack on Izghe, a largely
Christian community in Gwoza Local Government Area, Shettima stated that
going by the rising activities of the sect, Nigeria was in a state of
war.
He spoke just as the Northern States
Governors’ Forum said the onslaughts by the sect had gone
beyond the traditional pattern of attacks.
Jonathan had summoned the service chiefs
immediately he arrived at the Presidential Villa, Abuja from Lagos
where he held private meetings and consultations over the weekend.
None of them spoke with journalists at the end of the meeting, which was also attended by Vice-President Namadi Sambo.
Pointing out that the Federal Government
might not be able to defeat the Boko Haram Islamists, Shettima
said more resources must be committed to the anti-terror war if the
government really desired victory.
The governor said, “In a nutshell, what
we are being confronted with is that we are in a state of war. It is
what I came to update Mr. President.The sooner we stop playing the
ostrich and rise up to the challenges of the day, and marshall all
resources towards neutralising the antics of Boko Haram, the better for
all of us.
“But the bottom line is that we need
more resources, more vote on the ground. In all fairness to the
officers and men of the Nigerian Army and Police, they are doing their
best given the circumstances they have found themselves in.
“I made it emphatically clear to Mr.
President that the Boko Haram members are better armed and better
motivated than our own troops. Anybody who is following events in this
country can attest to the fact that they have a very smooth sail
overrunning communities, killing people.
“I am an eternal optimist as I have
always said but I am also a realist. Given the present state of affairs,
it is absolutely impossible for us to defeat Boko Haram.”
In Kaduna, Kaduna State, the Chairman
of the NSGF, Babangida Aliyu, also lamented the rising number of
attacks by insurgents and called for a political will by members of
the forum to wipe them out.
“The situation has gone beyond the
normal pattern that we gave to Boko Haram and I think we need to really
appreciate the gravity of the situation,” Aliyu, told journalists.
The governor , who spoke on the agenda
of a one-day general meeting by the forum, said now was the time for
the NSGF to give the Federal Government every support to root out
Boko Haram.
He said, “ We must take a position on
the crisis in the North-East. If it is a political will on our part, we
must create that political will to end the crisis in the North-East.
“Many countries will go to war on the
death of one person but we seem to be callous about what is happening
in the North-East. We must encourage the government(Federal Government)
to arrest the situation.”
Aliyu, who is also the governor of Niger
State, urged his colleagues to be frank and refrain from any
partisanship in discussing some of the challenges confronting the
region.
Apart from the security situation in the
region, other issues that formed the agenda of the meeting, were
oil and gas exploration; cattle rustling and the Almajiri system.
Among those who attended the Monday
meeting were Governor Musa Kwakwanso of Kano State, Ahmed
Abdulfattah (Kwara), Usman Dakingari (Kebbi) and Gabriel Suswam (Benue).
The deputy governors of Jigawa, Gombe, Kogi and Katsina represented their states.
Suswam’s presence at the meeting was
a surprise to his colleagues and journalists as he had in June 2013
vowed not to attend any activity by the NSGF.
He arrived at the late Gen. Hassan
Katsina House, venue of the meeting at about 11.19am in a black
Mercedes Benz jeep marked ABC 928 AL and went straight into the
presidential lodge where the meeting took place.
Suswam, his Bauchi and Katsina state
counterparts, Issa Yuguda and Ibrahim Shema, had in the wake of the
controversial election of the Nigeria Governors’ Forum which gave rise
to two factions, alleged betrayal by their colleagues in the region.
They had claimed that they endorsed Plateau Governor Jonah Jang as their consensus candidate for the NGF top post.
In the election which was held in
Abuja, Rivers State Governor, Rotimi Amaechi, scored 19 as against
16 votes garnered by Jang .
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