Director of Defense information, Major. Gen. Chris Olukolade
The reported killing of a top Boko
Haram leader said to be Abubakar Shekau has again ignited a fresh controversy
between Nigerian and Cameroonian troops.
The Cameroon Concord had
on Monday quoted a military source as having said that Shekau was killed on
Saturday by the Cameroonian Army during a cross border aerial bombardment of his
hideout in Nigeria.
To prove the killing, the newspaper
also published photographs of the bearded man it said was Shekau who usually
appears in videos as the leader of Boko Haram.
It made reference to a statement by
the Cameroonian military authorities on the killing but was silent on its
content.
The paper added in the report that
the Cameroon army had been in serious combat against thousands of
Boko Haram fighters trying to enter Cameroon through Fotokol from Gamboru Ngala
in Borno State.
But Nigeria’s Defence authorities
dismissed the claim that the said Shekau was killed by Cameroonian security
forces within Nigeria.
The Director of Defence Information,
Maj. Gen. Chris Olukolade, stated that there was no raid on any terrorists’
hideout by Cameroon or any other foreign country within Nigerian soil.
Olukolade explained that the ongoing
operations against insurgents in Kodunga and its neighbouring
communities were being undertaken solely by Nigerian forces.
He said, “There was no raid
whatsoever by Cameroon or any foreign forces in any part of Nigeria’s territory
in pursuit of terrorists as claimed in some reports allegedly quoting Cameroon
authorities.
“All operations in the
environs of Kodunga and all associated border locations within the country are
completely undertaken by Nigeria troops.”
The Defence authorities had said in a
tweet last Wednesday that troops who repelled an attack by insurgents at
Konduga, Borno State, captured a high ranking terrorist leader who was being
treated in military medical facility.
The Nigerian troops had
engaged the insurgents in Kodunga, killing 150 of them and capturing a large
cache of arms, ammunition and vehicles on Thursday.
An intelligence source said that the
military was still involved in moves to ascertain the identity of ‘the very
prominent commander.”
“A seriously wounded high ranking
terrorist leader is being treated in a military medical facility after he was
captured in operation,” the tweet read.
The intelligence source, who also
faulted the Cameroonian soldiers’ claim, added that the pictures by the Cameroonian newspaper could have been taken last year when Shekau was said
to have been injured at the Sambisa Forest but later died at Amitchide in
Cameroon.
The source added that the military
leadership looked for the grave of Shekau without success in Cameroon.
He said that the Cameroonian
authorities would have issued a statement on the killing of the top commander
if it was true.
The last statement Cameroon released
on the issue of the insurgency was an encounter with the insurgents at a border
town called Kirawa where four civilians were reportedly killed.
The then Spokesman for the Joint Task
Force, Sagir Musa, had said in a statement that Shekau might have died of
gunshot wound during a shootout with insurgents at the Sambisa Forest on June
30, 2014.
The announcement of his death was
faulted by the leadership of the sect which released video clips of Shekau.
A New York, United States-based Nigerian online news portal, SaharaReporters, however, quoted
another military source as claiming that the killed commander was one Bashir
Mohammed.
It said that Mohammed whose body was
in Kodunga, was the leader of Boko Haram’s Uye camp.
Cameroonian authorities yesterday
released a photo of a dead man they identified as Abubakar Shekau.
According to the report, Nigerian
soldiers, not Cameroonian troops, killed Mohammed last Friday in a fierce
battle against Boko Haram insurgents in Kodunga.
It said that Mohammed,
who bore a striking resemblance to Shekau and had
appeared in a recent video, was killed when he led insurgents who were
attempting to capture Kodunga and then seize Maiduguri.
The Defence Headquarters has however
said that another set of insurgents numbering 10 surrendered to troops at
Kawuri.
The Military authorities said in a
tweet on Monday that insurgents had been taken into custody for
security debriefing.
“Another set of 10 terrorists
yesterday (Sunday) surrendered to troops at Kawuri. In custody for necessary
security debriefing, victory for Nigeria,” the tweet read.
Five insurgents had on Saturday
surrendered to the military.
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