Six
military commanders, including an injured Lieutenant Colonel, have been
arrested by the military for withdrawing from Mararaba, Michika,
Madagali, Mubi and later Vimtim when Boko Haram insurgents attacked the
communities last week.
It was learnt
that an unspecified number of soldiers were also in detention for
allegedly abandoning the communities, thereby making it easy for the
insurgents to have an upper hand.
A
reliable military source, who made this known in Abuja on Sunday, said
the movement of five of the commanders had been restricted to the
officers mess in a military formation.
The
source, who did not name the military formation, because of security
reason, added that “one of them, a Leutenant Colonel is receiving
treatment at the MRS in Yola for serious injuries he sustained when
the car in which he was escaping with somersaulted several times.”
He said the injured officer would join his colleagues in the officers mess on recovery.
Our
source said, “Today (Sunday), the military authorities arrested five
commanders around the Mubi axis of Adamawa State. The sixth is a Lt.
Col.
“Some of those arrested were at
Mararaba, Madagali, Michika and other locations. I think the military
leaders are saying that the soldiers did not resist the Boko Haram when
they invaded the place.”
Our source
explained that the Defence authorities had already commenced
investigations into the activities of all its personnel in relation with
the capture of Mubi, the second largest town in Adamawa State and other
supposedly “fortified locations,” including Vimtim, the home town of
the Chief of Defence Staff, Alex Badeh.
The insurgents had reportedly burnt Badeh’s residence, a clinic and a civic centre in the community on Thursday.
The
source explained that the military authorities were determined to find
out why the Boko Haram’s advance in the state was not resisted by the
troops.
He said the military
chiefs were of the opinion that the “tactical withdrawal” of the
soldiers from their positions was nothing but a “display of
indiscipline and cowardice which would not be tolerated.”
Our
correspondents gathered that it was the military authority’s conviction
that enough weapons and men were deployed in Mubi and other locations
to frustrate the any attack by the insurgents.
On
Thursday, the Minister of Defence, Lt.Gen. Aliyu Gusau; the Chief of
Defence Staff, Air Chief Marshal Alex Badeh and the Chief of Army Staff,
Lt. Gen Kenneth Minimah, declined to speak with journalists on issues
relating to the capture of Mubi and the other communities by the
insurgents.
When contacted on the
issue, the Director of Defence Information, Maj.-Gen Chris Olukolade,
said, “Anyone found to have undermined the ongoing operation will face
appropriate sanctions and this is well known to all military personnel.”
Another
source, who confided in one of our correspondents, said soldiers had a
grueling encounter on Sunday with insurgents at Bladeba about one and
half kilometers from Mubi.
He said the soldiers were able to take over some of the checkpoints captured by the insurgents.
It was also learnt that some of the insurgents in control of Mubi were moving towards Hildi to avoid aerial bombardments.
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