News
45 Killed In Kano Attacks …Mark Tasks North On Boko Haram
Kano State Police Command, said yesterday that a total of 45 persons were killed by unknown gunmen in the state in the last six months.
The Commissioner of Police in the state, Alhaji Ibrahim Idris, who disclosed this to newsmen in Kano, said the gunmen rode on motorcycles while perpetrating the killings.
Idris said most of the victims of the attack were civilians, adding that security agents accounted for 10 per cent of the victims.
He added that the gunmen were believed to be residing on the outskirts of the city, especially in Sheka, Hotoro, Sharada, Mariri, Panshekara and Rijiyar Zaki.
Idris also disclosed that his command had detonated a total of 14 Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs) at various locations within the last one month.
He listed the areas where the explosives were detonated as Rimin Kebe, Dan Dishe, Sani Abacha Youth Centre, Fagge and Wudil.
The commissioner expressed appreciation to the public for helping security agents with useful information about the movements of suspected persons and materials.
He urged them to maintain the gesture.
Meanwhile, gunmen with explosives attacked a police station yesterday in the northern Nigerian city of Kano, previously targeted by Islamist militant group Boko Haram, a police source said.
“Goron Dutse police station is under attack by gunmen using explosives and guns,” a senior police official said on condition of anonymity.
Our source heard five blasts and saw smoke in the area of the police station. The explosions later halted, and the extent of the damage remained unclear as well as if there were casualties.
Kano, Nigeria’s second city and the largest in the north, was the site of Boko Haram’s deadliest attack yet, when coordinated bombings and shootings left at least 185 people dead in January.
The Islamist group’s insurgency, concentrated in Nigeria’s mainly Muslim north, has killed more than 1,000 people since mid-2009
In a related development, President of the Senate, Senator David Mark has tasked Northern leaders on the need to adopt positive and proactive attitude towards stamping out Boko Haram or risk having a region with a crippled future.
Mark also pointed out that the nation was gradually being dragged into a religious war as those who had been at the receiving end of the activities of Boko Haram were already running out of patience.
This, he said wasa serious threat to the unity of Nigeria and also warned that if there was no united Nigeria, there would definitely be no Northern Nigeria.
These formed part of the remarks made by the Senate President and chairman of the National Assembly, Monday at the opening ceremony of the Senate’s 2012 retreat holding in Uyo , Akwa Ibom state capital, tagged, “The National Assembly and National Security. Securing the Future For Development”.
Mark also raised question on the capacity of the northern leaders to put an end to terrorist activities as it was fast going beyond their scope and even those who founded and sponsored them.
“Northern states and their leaders should think properly before Boko Haram brings Northern Nigeria to its knees.
“Religious wars may break out because some people’s patience are already running out, there is a limit to everything.
“If Nigeria, God forbid, is plunged into these wars, Nigeria may not survive disintegration and when there’s no united Nigeria, definitely there will be no Northern Nigeria”
Senator Mark also renewed the call for Boko Haram members to identify themselves and embrace dialogue to make room for lasting resolutions to their genuine grievances.