Obasanjo’s soldier son shot by Boko Haram

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A son of former President Olusegun Obasanjo was on Monday shot   during a battle between the militant Islamic sect, Boko Haram and troops near Michika in Adamawa State.

It was gathered that Lt.-Col Adeboye Obasanjo led a platoon of the army that took on the insurgents at Baza near Michika.

A highly reliable security source said that Adeboye was injured in the leg by the insurgents during the encounter. He is an army engineer at the 3rd Division in Jos, Plateau State.

The source said that the former President's son was being treated at a military facility which identity was not revealed for security reasons.

"He was shot by Boko Haram in the battle to reclaim Michika from the insurgents. But there is no cause for alarm as he is responding to treatment," he added.

A top military source confirmed the shooting of Adeboye.

A family friend of Obasanjo, Mallam Mohammed Kebbi, told BBC Hausa Service that "Col. Adeboye, son of Obasanjo, was shot by the insurgents in Bazza on their (platoon) way to Michika."

Adeboye married Daisy Nyada in February 2008 at the Hilltop mansion residence of his father in Abeokuta, Ogun State.

During the Nigerian Civil War, Adeboye's father commanded the Army's 3 Marine Commando Division that took Owerri, effectively bringing an end to the civil war.

Meanwhile, soldiers launched an offensive on Sunday night against Boko Haram insurgents in their bid to recapture Michika in Adamawa State.

Security sources told our correspondents that the battle, which continued on Monday forced more residents of the town to flee to Yola.

The insurgents, who overran Michika and Uba on Sunday, had on Saturday taken over Gulak,   Bama and Gwoza in Borno State.

It was learnt that more troops and tanks were deployed from the military formation in Yola to complement the effort of those engaged in the battle to recapture Michika.

One of the sources said that another set of troops deployed from military formations within Adamawa State and other parts of the North-East, successfully took over Gulak from the insurgents.

Investigations revealed that     Mararaba and Uba   were also recaptured.

The source said that some soldiers from Borno State were involved in the battle for the liberation of Uba, a border town between Adamawa and Borno states.

He said that the insurgents fled Uba because the soldiers attacked from the Adamawa and Borno sides of the border community.

The source added that fighter jets and helicopters featured prominently in the encounters between the military and the insurgents.

The Fighter jets, according to him, bombed the hideouts of the insurgents while foot soldiers attacked their locations near the Michika LGA secretariat.

He said that the troops from Borno and Adamawa states blocked many of the routes used by the insurgents to enter into Cameroon.

The source   added, "I can confirm to you that troops are taking on the insurgents. They have not yet retaken Michika, but a serious operation is going on there.

"They have taken Uba and Gulak. Soldiers from Borno and Adamawa states were involved in the operation in Uba. You know that it is a border community between the two states.

"As we are talking now, the soldiers are taking on the insurgents in Mararaba which is between Michika and Mubi. The   soldiers have also blocked most of their routes to Cameroon while the Air Force is carrying out aerial bombardment."

The PUNCH learnt that the rush by residents   to leave the affected communities resulted in a sharp increase in transport fares.

For instance, those   fleeing Mubi to Yola paid as much as N3, 500 for a journey of N1000.

Investigations also   revealed that   ground operation for the liberation of Bama had not been launched even though the Air Force had continued aerial attacks on the area.

The Director of Defence Information, Maj. Gen. Chris Olukolade, could not be reached for comment on the   confrontation between the troops and the insurgents in Adamawa State as the calls to his mobile telephone line did not connect.

Boko Haram's caliphate, a declaration of war –NLC

Meanwhile, the President of the Nigeria Labour Congress, Mr. Abdulwahed Omar, has said that the recent declaration of an Islamic Caliphate by   Boko Haram   must not be allowed.

Omar said in an electronic mail on Monday that the increasing spate of attacks by the insurgents   amounted to an unacceptable declaration of a republic within a republic.

He warned that ceding any part of the country to the insurgents was inimical to the well-being of the nation and the growth of democratic governance.

He said that the NLC was concerned about the speed with which the insurgents had been taking over communities in the country in spite of the heavy security presence in the areas.

Omar said, "The   NLC is worried about the recent incursion into some towns and villages, especially in Borno, Adamawa and Yobe states   by   Boko Haram.

"These violent attacks and reported seizures and declaration of an Islamic republic remain unacceptable and must never be allowed, as a republic cannot exist within a republic.

"While we appreciate the commitment of Nigeria's security agencies, particularly the Armed Forces, to the battle against insurgency in Nigeria, we strongly warn that the consequence of allowing any part of the country to be forcefully seized by any group will be overwhelmingly harmful to our collective unity and socio-economic advancement, just as it would also endanger the growth of democracy.

"We are worried at the speed with which the insurgents are taking over communities even in areas reported to have heavy security presence."

PUNCH

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