80,000 Ex-Boko Haram Members In Our Custody – Military Chief
Boko Haram terrorists

Major General Chris Musa who is the Theatre Commander, Operation Hadin Kai on Sunday asserted that no fewer than 80,000 ex-Boko Haram terrorists are in military custody.

He made this known during an interview on Channels Forum, a Channels Television special to mark Nigeria’s 62nd Independence anniversary which was monitored by Africa Today News.

‘80,000 now,’ he said while responding to the number of Boko Haram ex-fighters and their family members that have surrendered and are in military custody.

Read Also: Insecurity: Boko Haram Are ‘Fraudulent People’ – Buhari

The figure, he stated, is 30,000 more than the initial 50,000 former insurgents that gave up their arms to turn a new leaf last year.

‘The strategy now is an all-government activity, the military, Operation Hadin Kai working together with the state government,’ Musa who appeared on the programme via Zoom in Maiduguri stated.

‘When the terrorist comes out from the bush, he reports to the closet unit. The commander takes him with his men, and then he is profiled and disarmed.

‘The state government provides the transport that they take them into Maiduguri where we have three camps. The fourth camp is being constructed. We are not the ones directly in charge of the administration and management. The state government takes care of all of them.’

Chibok, a Christian community in Borno State, made global headlines in 2014 when the Boko Haram terrorists stormed a secondary school in the area.

The affected school – Government Girls Secondary School – saw at least 276 schoolgirls kidnapped by the terrorists on April 14, while the students were writing their final examinations.

Although scores of them have been rescued by the military, about 100 of the victims have remained in captivity with residents of the area, including farmers living in fear of being attacked by the dreaded terrorists in the years that followed.

But Major General Musa said the military, in collaboration with other security agencies, has liberated the community from the insurgents. He explained that about 97 schoolgirls are still missing, with efforts in top gear to rescue them.

Africa Today News, New York

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