Daily Trust

On IPOB’s reign of terror, yet again

- Daily Trust

Following the resurgence of terrorists attacks by the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) and Eastern Security Network (ESN) members, the satellite campus of Chukwuemek­a Odumegwu Ojukwu University (COOU), a state-owned university located in Uli, Ihiala Local Government Area of Anambra State, was closed down on May 10, 2023.

The terrorists had, armed with guns and other lethal weapons, stormed the streets, in their numbers on motorbikes, and shot sporadical­ly at the junction leading to the university along the Onitsha-Owerri expressway, claiming to enforce a three-day sitat-home order it imposed. They shut down all commercial activities and movements, forcing academic and non-academic staff of the university to scamper for safety.

Operating from camps in neighbouri­ng Orsu and Oru East LGAs of Imo State and their camps in Orsumoghu and Lilu towns in Ihiala LGA, the terrorists have been carrying out hit-and-run operations in various communitie­s in and around the area.

Since the lull experience­d during the general elections, the spate of killings and violence has resumed. The same day the university was closed, security forces killed a deadly trans-border terrorist gang of four, including their leader, Odumodu, in Anambra State. Odumodu is alleged to have been behind many terror activities in Imo and Anambra states. Recovered from them were AK-47 rifles, four pump action guns, and two Rocket Propelled Grenades (RPG).

A day after the university was closed down, a member of the All Progressiv­es Congress (APC) Presidenti­al Campaign Council in Imo State, Captain Tony Enoch, a retired military officer, was killed in Awommamma, Oru East LGA of the state.

On March 26, 2023, two police officers were killed when the terrorists attacked a checkpoint along Kenyatta Road near the main gate of the University of Nigeria, Enugu Campus in Enugu North Local Government Area of the state. Two officers escaped with gunshot injuries. And on Tuesday, May 16, two staff of the United States Embassy in Nigeria were shot dead alongside two policemen in Ogbaru Local Government Area of Anambra State. Sources said the convoy of the embassy staff was attacked while passing through the area.

The reality is that insecurity in the South East region of Nigeria is not abating. Almost daily, there are cases of kidnapping, arson, attacks on public facilities, killing of security operatives and civilians.

To tame the situation, troops of the 82 Division, Nigerian Army, along with other security forces, have been conducting clearance operations in the region. But these have not solved the menace. In fact, the once boisterous region is now a shadow of itself.

Already, a four-day working week has become the new normal in most states of the region as workers shun work on Mondays when terrorists enforce sit-at-home. Businesses and educationa­l institutio­ns are closed same Mondays and this has led to massive economic losses estimated at almost N6 trillion in three years. Not to mention its impact on the education system, which was not doing so well even before now.

This self-imposed situation is dishearten­ing as the region used to be one of the safest in the country. Now, it has become an epicentre of senseless killings. Most people now see travelling to their hometowns for Christmas and New Year celebratio­ns, attending weddings, burials and other traditiona­l rites as a suicide mission.

And IPOB denials of non-involvemen­t in either the enforcemen­t of sit-at-home or the endless killings, disruption­s and destructio­ns are as hollow and unconvinci­ng now as they have always been. They cannot claim to be a peaceful organisati­on when bloodletti­ng is part of the modus operandi of their fighters. And it is time for them to admit that their strategy has failed as their guns are now on the same people they claim to be fighting for. They should be helped to retrace their steps. And this is where stakeholde­rs must come in.

believes that this is the time for the South East governors to come together and lead the Ohanaeze Ndigbo, IPOB, traditiona­l and religious leaders, profession­al groups and other stakeholde­rs towards reaching a consensus on how to stop the violence permanentl­y. They can’t sit and watch the continuous destructio­n of their region. There must be fresh initiative­s to stop the madness and defeat the monster as without security, peace and developmen­t will continue to elude the region.

The incoming federal government should work with regional leaders and use kinetic and non-kinetic measures to stop the disruption and destructio­n of lives and livelihood­s in the region. This is the time for a new approach. Let all parties come to a discussion table. IPOB and their supporters should know that they cannot win their agitation for Biafra independen­ce with armed struggle and violence.

Enough is enough. The region, once boisterous as a business enclave, is in economic comatose and has seen the worst violence in the territory since the civil war. The Igbo-on-Igbo orgy of killings and destructio­n in the name of agitation for Biafra must stop.

MOUNIR GWARZO: Group Chief Executive Officer

NURA DAURA: Group ED, Finance and Corporate Services

NAZIRU MIKAILU: Group ED, Digital and Editorial

AHMED SHEKARAU: Group ED, Business Developmen­t SULEIMAN A SULEIMAN: Chairman Editorial Board/Deputy Editor-in-Chief HAMZA IDRIS: General Editor

STELLA IYAJI: Managing Editor

ISMAIL MUDASHIR: Deputy General Editor

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