Security agencies have discovered that the spiritual leader of
the Boko Haram Islamic sect, Abubakar Shekau, who was wounded in a gun duel
between soldiers of the Joint Task Force and members of his sect early this
year, is hiding in Gao, a city in Northern Mali, receiving treatment from the
Tuareg rebels.
Military Intelligence sources told
Saturday Tribune on Friday that Shekau was ferried to Mali through porous
routes in the vast Nigerian border with a neighbouring country in the north.
The source cited the discovery of
Shekau’s hideout and the training base for Boko Haram sect members to unleash
terror on Nigerians as a further justification of the action of the Federal
Government to deploy 1,200 troops as well as Airforce fighter and transport
aircraft to Mali to help flush out the Tuareg militants and their sponsors.
Shekau was said to have been shot at
a checkpoint while he attempted to deceive operatives of the JTF by posing as a
nomadic Fulani man who was returning from a journey.
A gunfight ensued when the vehicle
carrying him and members of the sect approached a checkpoint and they
discovered that the soldiers were waiting for him.
During the exchange of fire, Shekau
and two other sect members with him escaped with gunshot wounds, while two
other members of the sect were killed on the spot. About six AK-47 rifles were
recovered from the vehicle.
The source noted that most of the
weapons, including IEDS (Improvised Explosive Devices) recovered from Boko
Haram members have been linked to those used during the Libyan uprising against
the late Libyan leader, Muammar Gaddafi.
Addressing troops shortly before
being airlifted to Mali on Thursday in Kaduna, the Chief of Army Staff,
Lt.-General Azubuike Ihejirika, spoke of the need for officers and soldiers of the
Nigerian army to be extra-vigilant, as there are indications that some
terrorists may have sneaked into the country.
Two Alpha jets, led by newly
decorated Air Vice Marshal Tayo Oguntoyinbo, departed the Nnamdi Azikiwe
Airport at about 4:25pm on Friday to Niamey, Niger Republic, from where they
will launch the attack on the stronghold of the Malian Islamists Tuaregs.
Saturday Tribune gathered that part
of the mission of the Nigerian troops deployed to Mali is also to fish out
Shekau from his hideout in Gao, where he is currently receiving treatment, and
bring him back to Nigeria to face trial for crimes against humanity.
Source: Tribune
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