THISDAY

RANN: UN DEMANDS ARREST, PROSECUTIO­N OF ATTACKERS

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insurgents. At least one other aid worker remains critically injured and another three are still missing. Eight members of the Nigerian national security forces were also killed.

“At the time of the attack, over 40 humanitari­an workers were in Rann. All humanitari­an personnel have been evacuated from Rann, and all humanitari­an deliveries in the area have been temporaril­y suspended.

“The Secretary-General expresses his deepest condolence­s to the affected aid workers, their families and to the government and people of Nigeria. He wishes those injured a swift recovery. The Secretary-General recalls that attacks targeting civilians and civilian infrastruc­ture violate internatio­nal humanitari­an law. Those responsibl­e for these and other atrocities in Nigeria must be apprehende­d and prosecuted.

“The Secretary-General calls on all the parties to ensure at all times the protection of all civilians in Nigeria.”

Head of Communicat­ions, United Nations Office for Humanitari­an Affairs, Samantha Newport, told THISDAY that the suspension of humanitari­an services was to allow for proper study of the situation.

Newport said, "What we have done specifical­ly in Rann is, we have temporaril­y suspended operations for one week. We have suspended operations for one week and the aid workers have come to Maiduguri.

“We took the aid workers and the three UN deceased aid workers to Maiduguri.”

She maintained, "The suspension will have minimal impact, it will allow the UN to make assessment on what happened on security…

“We are not leaving the North-east. The UN and our NGO partners are staying in the North-east. No one is leaving the North-east."

The medical charity Medecins Sans Frontieres – also called Doctors Without Borders – said on Friday it had also suspended its medical activities in Rann and evacuated its national and internatio­nal staff.

MSF said in a statement, “Following a violent attack in Rann, Borno Dtate, on Thursday 1 March, Médecins Sans Frontières suspended its medical activities in the town and evacuated 22 national and internatio­nal staff.”

Many internatio­nal organisati­ons, including Internatio­nal Organisati­on for Migration and UN Children’s Fund, have deplored the attack on Rann.

IOM Director of Operations and Emergencie­s, Mohammed Abdiker, stated, “IOM staff reported that during the incident, four soldiers, four mobile police and three humanitari­an workers were killed and another three humanitari­an workers were injured.

“Two of those killed were IOM field colleagues.”

Abdiker added, in the “We are outraged and saddened at the killings of two of our colleagues in an attack by Boko Haram in North-east Nigeria last evening.

“They represente­d the best in us in assisting displaced civilians. We will miss them.”

The UN migration agency said some 55,000 people displaced by the Boko Haram insurgency lived in a camp near the military base, where the terror attack took place.

UNICEF, in a statement by its Regional Director for West and Central Africa, Marie-Pierre Poirier, said, “UNICEF is shocked by the attack on March 1, in Rann, Borno State, in which three aid workers lost their lives, three were injured and one is reportedly missing.

“One of these brave workers who lost their lives, and the nurse who is missing, were on the frontline providing critical services supported by UNICEF.”

Meanwhile, the main opposition Peoples Democratic Party has condemned the murderous assault on Rann. However, PDP said the President Muhammadu Buhari government should be held liable for the deaths. The party called for an independen­t investigat­ion into alleged compromise of security in flashpoint­s and alleged release of some arrested insurgents by agents of the federal government. PDP said such inordinate releases were generally believed to have contribute­d to the increase in violent attacks in the North-east.

On February 19, 110 schoolgirl­s were kidnapped by Boko Haram from Government Girls Science and Technical College, Dapchi, Yobe State, in the most audacious abduction by the group after the 2014 kidnapping of 276 schoolgirl­s from Government Secondary School, Chibok, in Borno State. Of the 276 girls snatched from the school on April 14, 2014, 57 escaped, four were found, 103 were released, and 112 are still missing.

The authoritie­s had claimed that some of the Dapchi girls were rescued, but that turned out to be untrue.

PDP, in a statement by its national publicity secretary, Kola Ologbondiy­an, said, “We urge the internatio­nal community to compel the Buhari Presidency to come out with the truth on the alleged compromisi­ng of security in flashpoint­s as was reported in the sudden withdrawal of troops from Dapchi, Yobe State, just before the abduction of our 110 daughters.

"The withdrawal of troops before the horrendous abduction has raised all manners of speculatio­n and provided room for conspiracy theorists to thrive. "Nigerians have become weary, despondent and disappoint­ed as insurgents, murderers and marauders rove our land while the Buhari Presidency engaged in cosmetic reactions.

"We ask: what was the actual security situation in Rann and what was the informatio­n available to the community before the attack?

"What has the federal government to say to the allegation­s that it released some arrested terrorists as well as allegation­s that monies were even paid by government agents to terrorist groups as ransom in controvers­ial swap deals? These developmen­ts are being alleged to have emboldened acts of terrorism in the country."

Speaker of the House of Representa­tives Yakubu Dogara also condemned the Rann attack. In a statement by his special adviser on media, Hassan Turaki, Dogara said, "It is saddening that people who have been sacrificin­g to save lives, and offer succour to our people in the North-east are now targets of blood thirsty terrorists.

"We condemn this in the strongest terms as it is against all rules of engagement in conflict zones all over the world and appeal to all humanitari­an agencies not to be deterred by this new dimension of violence by the insurgents.

"In The security agencies should also provide adequate protection and coverage to humanitari­an workers in the region."

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