The
terrorists, yesterday, attack Mubi, the commercial nerve centre and second
biggest town in Adamawa State as well as other neighbouring towns and villages,
killing many residents who were unable to escape.
Many of the
soldiers and residents were said to have fled to neighbouring local government
areas. Residents who fled the town said the insurgents also engaged Nigerian
troops in a deadly shoot-out.
Joshua
Chinasa, a fleeing resident of Uba town which is about 30 kilometres from Mubi,
said several people might have been killed during the shooting spree which was
still going on at press time. He said:
“We are in
serious trouble as these men (Boko Haram) has taken over our towns, splitting
in groups with some Boko Haram members advancing towards Mararraban Mubi and
Vintim, the home town of Chief of Defence Staff, Air Marshal Alex Badeh, giving
Nigerian troops a hot chase. Mubi has now become a ghost of itself as people in
their hundreds are fleeing for their lives. Even here in Maiha, we saw military
vehicles zooming off towards Yola, the state capital.”
He said that
several people might have been killed during the shooting spree that lasted
almost two hours in Uba and other villages.
Ahmad Sajoh,
the spokesperson to former Adamawa State governor, Murtala Nyako, who also
narrated his experience, said his daughter was missing after the advance of the
insurgents early yesterday.
He said:
“This morning, I got a call from my daughter who is a 200 level student of
Adamawa State University, Mubi. She was hysterical. I was in Abuja for a
meeting, but her information forced me to head back to Yola immediately. She
told me that the insurgents were approaching the town which is the second
largest in Adamawa State. I ordered her to leave the hostel and join her
cousins to escape the town. I called my father who confirmed the story.
“By the time
I arrived Yola airport, the town had fallen to the insurgents. My parents are trapped
while my daughter and her cousins are missing. We lost contact for the past six
hours.
“My
colleague, Mallam Iliyasu of the Bursary Department Adamawa State University,
Mubi, who is trapped in the town, said by 2pm the Police Barracks in the GRA was
overrun by the insurgents; the Prison was blown open while fighting was going
on at the Army barracks.
“The IDP
(Internally Displaced Persons) camp at Lamorde was thrown into confusion. The
new rulers of the town had issued a decree banning all entry and exit to the
town. Students who trooped to the motor park are now stranded with most taking
refuge in any house that could welcome them.
“The barracks
are the least safe locations in the town. So far there are no reported cases of
killings or abductions. But fear and apprehension had taken over. There is no
word yet on the incident either by government or the military.”
A widow,
Lamidi Kery, who lost her husband to a similar attack in Mubi, confirmed that
people died during the attack. She said: “The town is deserted now people have
all fled into nearby bushes and hilltops. We have seen soldiers in their
vehicles retreating.”
Another
source said that the Boko Haram insurgents overran Madagali down to Bazza, both
in Adamawa State. “They are having a field day. Even yesterday, I sneaked into
Michika town to evacuate my aged mother, but surprisingly only insurgents could
be heard around, there were no soldiers.
“Mubi has now
become a shadow of its former self, people in hundreds are scampering for their
lives. Even here in Maiha, we saw soldiers’ vehicles zoom-off towards Yola, the
state capital,” said a local source in Maiha, another town in Adamawa.”
Another
resident in the troubled town said that one of his siblings had not been seen
and every effort to establish contacts with him in the last 24 hours had proved
abortive.
“The town has
been deserted while the only place safe for us is the military base in Mubi and
the situation in Yola, the state capital, is so bad that the residents are
apprehensive due to the influx of strange elements into the town”, he said.

Shame on Nigeria government
ReplyDeleteno more ceasefire agreement
ReplyDelete