Fresh facts emerged yesterday, on
how members of the Jama’atu Ahliss-Sunnah Lidda’awati Wal Jihad (Western
education is evil) , otherwise known as Boko Haram, were able to perpetrate
Friday’s dastardly bombing that claimed about 12 lives and injuring many more
at the Internally Displaced Persons, IDPs, camp in Malkohi, Yola, Adamawa
State.
In separate interviews, eye witnesses and returnees, resident in the camp, said some Boko Haram members masquerading as IDPs were inadvertently brought into the camp on Thursday, some 24
hours before the camp bombing.
They revealed that some of the persons, brought into the camp from Sambisa Forest, were the prime suspects in the bombing.
One of the eye witnesses, Mr. Sunday Musa, told Sunday Vanguard that camp inmates were preparing to have breakfast when the blast occurred.
“Our fears were that we in camp know one another; we know
where we came from; and for the military to just bring unknown faces to join
us, especially from Sambisa Forest, has always been very disturbing to us”.
“Now”, he continued, “see what has happened. Unknown IDPs
were brought in yesterday and there is bomb blast today. Who do you think is
responsible?”
Sunday Vanguard discovered that the
influx of IDPs, who may not have been properly screened before being allowed
into the camp, was a possibility.
Another inmate, who preferred anonymity, disclosed that the bombing was not carried out by the usual drive-by instance or a suicide bomber who drove straight into the camp. He added:
“From the way the bomb exploded and the very stern nature of
the work of the military here, it may have been smuggled into the camp much
earlier.”
NEMA Camp Coordinator in Adamawa
State, Sa’ad Bello, suspected that the blast might have originated from the
over 300 IDPs brought into the camp that Thursday morning from Madagali and 70
others from Sambisa Forest.
The coordinator confirmed that the number of dead might be higher because of the seriousness of those injured.
Also at the scene of the blast, the North-East Coordinator of the Red Cross
Society, Mallam Aliyu Maikano, who collaborated with his NEMA counterpart,
described the situation as unfortunate.
An eyewitness, Malama Nefisatu Goni, who escaped the blast by the whiskers, narrated that she left the scene not quite ten minutes before the incident. According to her, women always gathered in tents to make their hair and she just went there to try and make hers but was told to come back because of the busy schedule of the operators and the queue on standby.
“As I was moving from there”, Goni, a widow, narrated in an
emotion-laden voice, “not quite long afterwards, I heard a loud bang only to
see the debris of the tents flying everywhere”.
No comments:
Post a Comment