Gen. Magashi reportedly says Buhari ended Boko Haram but terrorists now ‘chasing clout’ with killings

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File: Major General Bashir Magashi (Rtd), Nigeria's Minister of Defence.

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Nigeria’s Defence Minister, Major General Bashir Magashi (Rtd), has applauded President Muhammadu Buhari’s efforts in cutting the vicious Boko Haram sect down to size since he took up the reins of power in 2015.

General Magashi was reported to have “falsely” claimed on Channels Television Thursday that the dreaded terrorists have been subdued and dislodged from their strongholds in the troubled Northeast, when he said, “No piece of land is occupied by Boko Haram in Borno State.”

He added that, “In Borno, about 20 local governments were under capture by Boko Haram, but as soon as Buhari came, they were all subdued and we took over all these things and we even said we technically defeated this Boko Haram,” he said.

His glowing appraisal of the Buhari administration comes nearly two weeks after scores of farmers were slaughtered on a rice field in Borno’s Zabarmari village by Boko Haram insurgents.

The media report described as attempt to deflect responsibility for the carnage the presidential spokesman Garba Shehu’s statement that the slain farmers did not obtain military clearance before resuming farming activities in the area he said was military zone, which the report said was all but contradicting President Buhari administration’s claim that the Nigerian military had seized control of the volatile region ravaged by decade-long terrorist and insurgent violence.

General Magashi, however, insists that national security has improved under President Buhari.

“The problem of this country is that we always forget too soon. Look in 2015 backwards. Everywhere in Nigeria in those years, you find that there were commotions, no security, people can’t move. Even in Abuja, there were bombings,” the minister said.

He attributed the widespread killings by Boko Haram to a desperate attempt by the terrorists to seek global attention.

“The only thing normally with the kind of insurgent operation is that they want to surprise you, embarrass you, and do whatever they think that would attract international news or the national news or cause commotion within the environment they operate,” he averred.

Nigerian authorities have admitted helplessness in containing insurgency, which has tarried since 2009, leaving thousands killed and millions displaced.

Chief of Army Staff Tukur Buratai has predicted that terrorism may persist in the country for another 20 years.


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