The Director of Information
and Public Relations of the NAF, Group Capt. Ayodele Famuyiwa, told The PUNCH
on the telephone on Sunday that the NAF was intensifying
aerial operations
during the day and the night to dislodge the militants terrorising riverside
communities of Ogun and Lagos states.
Pilots of the Nigerian Air
Force fighter jets have destroyed the four major camps of suspected militants,
who are said to be armed pipeline vandals at Arepo, Ogun State, on the fourth
day of the sustained aerial attacks on the hoodlums in the area.
Famuyiwa said the NAF was
carrying out sustained operations against the vandals to prepare the stage for
the ground troops to move in and get rid of the gunmen.
Investigation revealed that
the fighter pilots of the NAF had carried out successful strikes on the two major
camps in the Fatola and Abuja and two other areas.
Famuyiwa said the embattled
militants were fleeing their fortress into the mangrove forest and were being
monitored effectively by platforms deployed for the operation.
The Air Force spokesman explained
that the NAF had carried out surveillance activities on the hoodlums to gather
the necessary information about their activities before the commencement of the
current aerial bombardments.
He said the fighter pilots
were using rockets against the vandals because they built their tents on
pipelines, which made it difficult to use bombs in the operation.
Famuyiwa stated that bombs
could destroy pipelines apart from the fact that those dropped on water might
not explode immediately and could become a problem in future.
He said, “So, for now, it
is just the Air Force that is operating in that area. We started with
intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance basically, to gather information
about the position of those people, how fortified are they, and to look into the
things that they are doing.
“After that survey, we have
been able to identify targets to be eliminated. The first strike was conducted
on Thursday. We struck at their camps and the whole essence is to take them up
so that we can dislodge them from that area pending the time that the surface
forces would be able to come in.
“So, every day, we have
been striking and we are doing both night and day operation. There are about
four camps that have been identified, that we have struck.
“The challenge is that you
need to be able to match your targets with your weapons. Don’t forget that
those idiots built their tents on the pipelines. It appears that it is not
something that started today, it is something that has been on for years.’’
Famuyiwa added, “When we hit
those camps, they are now moving deeper into the forest. So we cannot say that
you can just dislodge them for a while, they might want to come back. So what
we are doing is that we have intensified our surveillance activities to bomb
them deep into the mangrove forest.
“Like I said, they are very
crafty people, they have built their camps, on the pipelines to be able siphon
fuel. So, what we are doing is to use rockets to fire at them; you can get some
level of destruction of the tents but you may not destroy the tents completely,
but you can be sure that any human element that is there, it is going to kill
them.”
Famuyiwa explained further
that video clips from the aerial offensive against the militants showed that
they were well armed and very organised.
According to him, they had
GPMG mounted on canoes on their observation posts, which showed that they had
been involved in the vandalisation of the pipelines for long.
The Acting Director,
Defence Information, Brig. Gen. Rabe Abubakar, told one of our correspondents
on Saturday that the military would sustain the operations to ensure that the
camps of the vandals were removed.
However, neither Famuyiwa
nor Abubakar could give the casualty figure in the four-day aerial pounding of
the hideouts of the hoodlums.
A source involved in the
operation said on Sunday that there was continuing rocket fire while ground
troops and other security agents were in strategic locations in the area.
The source said the armed
vandals were holed up in the area and could not provide any resistance to the
military onslaught on them.
“The operation is not over.
These guys are still inside there. The military is still pounding their
locations.
“You know that the terrain
is very difficult, you can only get there with canoes but the troops have
blocked the entire place. Only the military can tell you when ground forces
will move in,” Abubakar stated.

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