President Goodluck Jonathan chaired at a meeting of the National Defence Council, in which he took the decision to extend it today, November 17, 2014, Monday. This is the third extension of the controversial tactics.
The two-hour closed-door
meeting ended at about 1.40pm. The Chief of Defence Staff, Alex Badeh, did not
comment on its outcome.
The Attorney-General of the
Federation, Mohammed Adoke, made a brief comment. According to Adoke, the
meeting went fine. President Jonathan would “immediately” send a request to the
National Assembly for the approval of the counter-terrorism move.
There have been thoughts
and speculations that President Goodluck Jonathan may enforce “total emergency
rule” on the states by employing military administrators to take over from the
state governors.
The emergency rule was
first confirmed in the affected states on May 14, 2013, by President Goodluck
Jonathan over the continued activities of members of the Boko Haram sect. It
was subject to revision every 6 months, approximately.
Earlier on Sunday the
Nigerian Army said it retook and protected the north-eastern town of Chibok,
where Boko Haram rebels kidnapped more than 200 schoolgirls in April.
At least 10 people were
killed and some 60 others wounded Sunday when a female suicide bomber blew
herself up at a busy mobile phone market in Azare area of Bauchi State.
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