Boko Haram kills ‘dozens’ in NE Nigeria Mohammadu Buhari

Kano — Boko Haram gunmen on horseback killed dozens of people in a village in northeast Nigeria’s Borno state near the border with Cameroon, local eyewitnesses said yesterday.

The incident took place on Monday morning in Fatawe village near Gwoza, where around 100 Boko Haram militants rounding up residents, tying their hands behind their backs then slitting their throats, they said.

“They killed several dozens but I can’t give a precise number because we have yet to go back and take a headcount of the dead” said Amodu Kadir, a village resident who fled to Mubi village in neighbouring Adamawa state.

“The attackers who we have no doubt are Boko Haram gunmen came to the village around 10:30 and rounded up everyone including women and children after surrounding the village,” he said. “They fired several warning shots in the air before they began to tie the hands of adult males behind their back and slaughtered them while other residents watched in horror,” he said.

Kadir, whose father was among the victims, said the “macabre sight sent the terrified crowd fleeing in all directions in a frenzied effort to escape.

“But the attackers pursued us on their horses, shooting and trampling to death their victims,” he said.

“The attackers killed many people in our village when they attacked on Monday. They slaughtered some, and shot and trampled those who tried to flee under the hooves of their horses,” he said.

Meanwhile, President Muhammadu Buhari has shaken up Nigeria’s corrupt bureaucracy and intensified the battle against Boko Haram in his first 100 days, but has struggled to set out his vision for the faltering economy, say analysts.

The 72-year-old celebrates the landmark tomorrow, after taking office on May 29 on a wave of optimism for oil-rich Nigeria, which has Africa’s biggest population and economy but many deep and seemingly intractable problems. He presented himself to the electorate as a hawk on security and an iron fist on corruption, pledging to recover “mind-boggling” sums of stolen oil money and vowing to crush the six-year Islamist insurgency that has killed at least 15,000 in the north-east.

The press has been largely supportive of Buhari in his first months, criticising his apparent preference for fellow northerners in his early appointments but comparing him favourably with the defeated Goodluck Jonathan, who had ruled since 2010. “His predecessor spent over [five] years in office and never made half of the impact Buhari has made in three months,” political commentator Lawal Ogienagbon wrote last week in Lagos-based daily The Nation.

Buhari’s vice-president, Yemi Osinbajo, has estimated the country’s debts at some $60bn and said Nigeria’s economy is in its worst state in the country’s 55-year independent history.

Meanwhile Buhari has accused his predecessor of leaving the treasury “virtually empty” as global oil shocks squeezed Nigeria’s crude-dependent finances, forcing government projects to be scrapped or halted and state employees to go months without pay.

In particular, Buhari has expressed concern about oil sector fraud and the non-payment of federal revenues into government coffers since 2011 — but he maintains the situation can be turned around.

In an early sign that he was serious about graft, Buhari sacked the entire board of state oil company NNPC, notorious for mismanagement and rampant theft, and installed a Harvard-educated lawyer to spearhead reforms as the new managing director.

But the former military ruler has yet to appoint a cabinet, indicating that he planned to leave the announcement of his ministers until September, and observers have voiced frustration at the slow pace of change. “This has been viewed in a disappointing light, as the president was expected to be a more decisive leader than his predecessor,” Ronak Gopaldas, a sovereign risk analyst at South Africa’s Rand Merchant Bank, said.

The result, said Gopaldas, has been a “marked reversal” in the goodwill from the business community Buhari enjoyed as he basked in the glow of his election victory. “As a president who campaigned on a message of change, especially security and corruption, the big elephant in the room remains the economy, and clarity in this regard is sorely lacking,” Gopaldas said.

“There are currently more questions than answers around what the policy impulse will be, clouding the outlook for both fiscal and monetary policy.”

On the military front, Buhari scored points for dismissing the top brass in August and making a very public show of ordering his replacement chiefs of staff to stamp out Boko Haram within three months.

But this is a “near impossible” ambition, according to Andrew Noakes, coordinator of the Nigerian Security Network of analysts, and Buhari should instead be judged on his efforts to reorganise the government’s campaign against Boko Haram. “In a short space of time he has made great strides by focusing attention on tackling the underlying causes of the insurgency rather than just its symptoms, by bringing new officers into senior positions in the military, and by relocating the military command to northeast Nigeria,” Noakes. — AFP.

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