- Casualty figure unknown
- Prepares for onslaught against militants in the Niger Delta
- MEND wins concessions on freedom for Tompolo, Okah Brothers, Nnamdi Kanu, others
Chiemelie Ezeobi in Lagos and Emmanuel Addeh in Yenagoa
Ground forces of the military Joint Task
Force yesterday moved into the dreaded enclaves of the notorious
pipeline vandals at the Arepo area of Ogun State and parts of Lagos
State to mop up any remaining resistance by the militant groups who had
been terrorising the areas since the last few weeks. This followed three
days of sustained aerial bombing of the militants’ hideouts in the
creeks and mangroves, THISDAY has learnt.
This was as indications emerged
yesterday that the federal government might have concluded preparations
for an onslaught against unyielding militants in the Niger Delta. Local
militants in the delta have claimed several attacks on critical oil and
gas facilities in the area, especially since the beginning of this year,
with the federal government accusing them of sabotaging the national
economy.
As a prelude to what may be one of the biggest military operations in the oil-rich region in recent times, the military authorities have visited the Niger Delta to assess the level of preparedness of the armed forces for the exercise, codenamed, “Operation Crocodile Smile”.
In a related development, Movement for
the Emancipation of the Niger Delta said at the weekend it had secured
major “concessions and guarantees” in its on-going dialogue with the
federal government. The dialogue is a window created by the federal
government to try to achieve a peaceful resolution of the issues behind
the resurgent militancy in the Niger Delta and attacks on the oil
infrastructure. It aims to circumvent a military solution, which many
fear may be counterproductive.
MEND said it had won guarantees for the
release of its leader, Henry Okah, his brother, Charles Okah, and leader
of the Indigenous Peoples of Biafra, Mr. Nnamdi Kanu, among other
detained or jailed persons. It said the federal government had also
agreed that Mr. Government Ekpemupolo, aka Tompolo, would not be
arrested or intimidated whenever he made himself available.
The JTF comprises elements of the
Nigerian Navy, Nigerian Air Force, and the Nigerian Army, alongside
operatives of the Department of State Services, Nigerian Security and
Civil Defence Corps, and the Nigeria Police.
While the aerial bombardment of the
armed vandals’ bases in Ogun and Lagos states were carried out by NAF’s
Alpha jets, with the trio of the EC135 and the ATR4 as force
multipliers, military units on land combed the bombed areas to take out
any militants that might still be holding out.
Before the offensive started on Thursday
night, the DSS had ferretted intelligence and underground fact-finding
while the police were brought in for search and rescue at the fringes of
the mangrove for persons who had been kidnapped by the militant
pipeline vandals.
The aerial bombardment and subsequent
assault on the enclaves by the JTF was part of the military’s operation
tagged “Operation Awatse”, an Hausa word for “scatter”, which has land,
air and maritime components, with each under a commander. The offensive
was initiated to flush out the pipeline vandals and militants operating
at Ishawo, in Ikorodu, and Igando areas of Lagos State, and Arepo,
Awawa, Elepete, and Ibafo areas of Ogun State. This is in line with the
JTF’s mandate of protecting the Nigerian National Petroleum
Corporation’s pipelines from Atlas Cove to Mosimi Depot.
After months of successfully repelling
the vandals from these areas, arresting many and recovering countless
stolen products, the displaced vandals had merely retreated from sight.
They had moved deeper into the mangroves and thick foliage, where it
would be practically impossible for the security forces to track them
because of the difficult terrain. They also cut down trees and blocked
the already narrow and shallow creeks. THISDAY also gathered that to
prevent invasion by the military, the armed vandals had laid booby traps
along the narrow pathway that leads to the mangrove.
Investigations revealed that before the
bombings, the suspects had become warlords and were illegally siphoning
petrol, raping and kidnapping. They had created a fiefdom for themselves
and hoisted their flag in the area they declared the “Republic of the
Generals.”
The Chief of Defence Staff, General
Gabriel Olonisakin, had directed a resort to aerial bombardment after an
aerial surveillance, allegedly, revealed that the vandals had moved
from accessible areas to the impenetrable mangroves. The military
decided to take out the enclaves and hideouts of the vandals once and
for all by bombing all the mapped out areas captured in video format by
the surveillance helicopters.
THISDAY gathered that at the beginning
of the aerial offensive, the vandals had mounted a GPMG gun on one of
their boats and attempted to shoot down the military aircraft.
Speaking to THISDAY exclusively, the
Flag Officer Commanding, Western Naval Command, Rear Admiral Bobai
Ferguson, said although they had battled issues of the weather and the
capability of the jets to fly at night, the bombing had to be conducted.
Ferguson said, “The air force went for
reconnaissance this afternoon and they went in and came out. After the
bombing, the picture of the bombardment was interpreted. We will sustain
bombing of the mapped out areas.
“After the bombardment and the
interpretation, the land forces will go in today (Saturday) into those
places that have been bombarded to comb it thoroughly.”
Disclosing the modus operandi of the
vandals, he said, “The NNPC pipes are on the surfaces, so what these
vandals did was to dig boreholes and it’s two kilometres away from the
pipelines. So you don’t even see them siphoning the products.
“What happens is that these products run
into their already dug boreholes, from which they now run into kegs and
drums and sell to the buyers. It’s a carefully planned operation.”
The Air Force Director of Public
Relations, Wing Commander Ayodele Famuyiwa, told THISDAY that the aerial
bombardment was on-going and would be sustained. Famuyiwa said, “The
Chief of Air Staff, Air Marshal Sadiq Abubakar, is committed to timely
employment of air power in response to Nigeria’s national security
imperatives. We have sustained our air power in the North, in the South
and now in the West.
“Our Alpha jets conducted the air
strikes and we won’t stop bombing that area until the vandals are
flushed out and the menace of pipeline vandalism and crude oil theft is
eradicated in that area.”
On the casualties, Famuyiwa said he could not confirm the number.
Meanwhile, THISDAY has exclusively
gathered that some petrol stations along the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway
were already on the watch list of the security agencies. A reliable
source said on condition of anonymity regarding the pipeline vandals,
“As part of the operations, we also plan to not just mop up their
sponsors but also the customers, who patronise them and buy stolen
products.
“Already, our intelligence gathering has
revealed that some petrol stations along the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway
work in connivance with these vandals. Their deal is that these vandals
get the stolen products and sell some to them at lower rates.
“We have also located their major
market, which is a settlement in one of the creeks. Our intelligence
gathering revealed that they sometimes go as far as smuggling the
products through Igando creeks to Badagry. We have men stationed already
there to block the market and arrest any of them seen trying to make
sales.”
During one of the navy’s patrols, it was
discovered that from the Awawa area of Arepo, it was easy to ferry the
products from Arepo, from where they are transported to different parts
of the country and sometimes to neighbouring African countries. Also, in
the Ikorodu area, at Majidun, there is a market that handles the
trans-border trade between vandals in Ikorodu and buyers from Arepo and
vice versa, investigation has revealed.
In the Niger Delta, it is not clear when
the military onslaught against recalcitrant militants would fully
commence. But a transit camp, which would be temporarily occupied by
some of the new security personnel that would carry out the operation,
had been furnished in a quiet and isolated area of Yenagoa. The camp was
inspected by military chiefs yesterday in an apparent bid to ensure its
readiness for the military operation.
As part of a strategy to incorporate
local communities into the operation, it was gathered that plans were
underway to form a Civilian Joint Task Force in the Niger Delta, like
the type helping the security services in the fight against Boko Haram
in the North-east.
In the main, the proposed Niger Delta
Civilian JTF , it was learnt, would comprise some ex-militants under the
federal government’s amnesty programme who would be deployed to help in
the gathering of intelligence to tackle the resurgence of violent
agitations in the region from where the government gets most of its
revenues.
Also included in the overall plan to
rout the militants, especially those that have decided not to engage in
talks with the federal government, or if the negotiation with them
fails, is the deployment of specially trained forces in maritime combat
and the rotation of military personnel around the country.
Among those who inspected critical
assets in the area recently, in what could be the final preparation
before deployment, were the Minister of Defence, Mansur Muhammed
Dan-Ali; Olonishakin; The Commander Joint Task Force, Operation Delta
Safe, Rear Admiral Joseph Okojie; Chief of Logistics at the Defence
Headquarters, Abuja, Major General Austin Okoh; and Flag Officer
Commanding, Central Naval Command, Yenagoa, Rear Admiral Mohammed Garba.
The groundwork before the full
deployment also aligns with the Chief of Army Staff, Lt. General Tukur
Buratai’s assertion last week that the military would from this weekend
launch “Operation Crocodile Smile” to engage the recalcitrant warlords.
The operation, it was understood, would
afford the Special Forces a chance to practise amphibious exercises in
riverine areas in the South-south, especially in Delta and Bayelsa
states, which have had intense militancy in the last few months, and
then Rivers as well as parts of Akwa Ibom and Ondo states.
Dan-Ali, in company with his entourage
of heads of most security formations in the Niger Delta, had earlier
visited the deputy governor of Bayelsa State, Rear Admiral Gboribiogha
John Jonah (rtd), and informed him and other officials of the state of
the new plan to secure the region. The minister added that having
succeeded in decapitating Boko Haram in the North-east, the next port of
call would be the Niger Delta, which has recently come under attack
from various militants groups, with untold consequences for the economy.
Though the defence minister noted that
negotiation was still on the table and indeed insisted that the federal
government was talking with the warlords, he maintained that applying
military force to dislodge the armed agitators remained a potent option,
saying, “We cannot rule that out.”
On fears about the effect of the
military operation on the innocent civilian population, Dan-Ali said,
“There has never been war without peace. We are not saying we are going
to war, all we are doing is internal security work and it is not war, so
you can’t be claiming collateral damage.
“We know our rules of engagement. We
cannot just use force like that without any mandate. So, collateral
damage does not come in. As far as we are concerned, we are just trying
to stop criminality in the area.”
During a separate meeting with Bayelsa
State government officials, Dan-Ali solicited the cooperation of all to
make the exercise a success. He said, “During our last meeting with the
vice president, with all the South-south governors in attendance, we all
agreed that whatever security arrangements we have must involve the
people within the area. I am here to reinforce that decision where all
the governors and locals will have to be part of our security
architecture.
“We have succeeded in the North-east,
where we have that arrangement. The local JTF or civilian JTF, as we
call them, have helped in our operations, especially in gathering
intelligence.
“One of the cardinal arrangements is to
have a pure assessment of how we can involve or imbibe them in the new
security architecture called operation ‘Delta Safe’
“We are also of the opinion that some of
these operations that will be conducted will help us to identify some
of the illegal websites used for rumour or rumour mongering or selling
our armed forces in a bad way and involvement in activities that
shouldn’t be.
“We are getting some of the amnesty
students that have graduated and they can be involved. They are being
paid. As negotiation is going, we are all stakeholders and we should all
be involved.”
The minister also said, “There would be
constant rotation of our security personnel so that some of them will
not be involved in illegal activities as a result of overstaying.
“We are also training a special brigade to add to what we have on the ground and we require some element of assistance.”
While fielding questions from
journalists, Olonishakin “The military has the constitutional duty to
ensure peace in the nation. Whatever we will need to do to ensure that
will be done. We have allowed the truce so that whoever wants to talk
can be given that opportunity. But we also have to make sure that our
troops are ready so that the truce is well implemented.
“However, I want to call on those who
are still sabotaging our critical infrastructure to put on their
thinking caps and come to the negotiation table. We in the military will
ensure that our critical infrastructure is protected. We will ensure
that anyone found sabotaging the economy is properly dealt with and all
the criminals are brought to book.”
Meanwhile, as part of efforts to
circumvent the use of military tactics to resolve the Niger Delta
crisis, MEND said in a statement yesterday signed by its spokesman, Jomo
Gbomo, that in its negotiations with the federal government, the latter
had also conceded to the release of “Obi Nwabueze; review of the life
sentence handed to Mr. Edmund Ebiware; based on a proposal put forward
by the Aaron Team representative for Abia and Imo states, Senator
Adolphus Wabara, conditional release of IPOB leader, Mr. Nnamdi Kanu,
and others, if they renounced their agitation for a ‘Biafra Republic’.”
Other concessions won by MEND, according
to the statement, include, “That Mr. Government Ekpemupolo shall not be
arrested, harassed and/or intimidated whenever he makes himself
available as a delegate of the MEND Aaron Team 2; that, international
arbitrator and conflict negotiator, American Dr. Judith Asuni, shall be
accepted as the representative of the Niger Delta Avengers (NDA) on the
MEND Aaron Team; that the criminal charges against Urhobo freedom
fighter, Mr. Kelvin Prosper Oniarah, shall be reviewed;
“That, the life sentence which was
handed to seven soldiers in 2008 who actively supported the Niger Delta
struggle be reviewed under the Presidential Amnesty Programme.” It said
the affected persons were Major Suleiman Alabi Akubo, Sergeant Mathias
Peter, L.Cpl Alexander Davou, L.Cpl. Moses Nwaigwe, L.Cpl. Nnandi Anene,
L.Cpl. Taatihi Emmanuel, and PTE Caleb Bawa.
As part of the agreements, MEND said
while the military would be carrying out its exercise, code-named
Operation Crocodile Tears, “MEND would commence a meet-the
Government-Actors-and-People tour of the Niger Delta region code-named
‘Operation Moses’.
“While ‘Operation Crocodile Tears’ is
aimed at ensuring the combat readiness of the Nigerian Army in
amphibious and internal security operations in the Niger Delta as well
as check criminal activities like kidnapping, pipeline vandalism, piracy
and other forms of criminal activities spearheaded by the NDA in the
region, MEND’s ‘Operation Moses’ is essentially to inform, educate and
generally sensitise the citizenry in the Niger Delta, particularly the
government, the youth, oil companies, elders and militant community on
the need to ceasefire and support the President Muhammadu Buhari
administration in its determined bid to proffer sustainable solutions to
the current Niger Delta crisis.”
In a surprising reversal, MEND ended its statement with, “Long live the Niger Delta…Long live the Federal Republic of Nigeria!”
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