The resultant effect of the killing of over 50 Boko Haram
members is that many Nigerian soldiers are deserting after the military
retreated from Biita and Izge as Boko Haram militants mounted a major offensive.
SR reported that sources confirmed numerous soldiers had handed in their
weapons and deserted in civilian clothes.
The source went on to say that rampaging Boko Haram fighters, numbering
at least 500 and heavily armed, attacked and sacked army bases located in the
area.
Realizing that they were outgunned, the soldiers fled their
positions as the militants roared towards their positions in Biita. One source
asserted that the soldiers had completely deserted Izge and Biita as militants
retake the town and retrieved all the weapons earlier taken from them on
Saturday and Sunday.
Complaining about inadequacy of weaponry, at least 100
soldiers reportedly turned in their weapons and left through Shua-Mubi Road wearing civilian
clothing.
A mid-level officer told SaharaReporters that the Nigerian
army had increased operations and aggressively deployed more soldiers in the
last week in order to convince the US and other European nations helping
Nigeria with intelligence that the military was serious about defeating Boko
Haram. “But the issue is that troop morale remains low. The talk from [those
in] Abuja has not been met with equal zeal to provide ammunition and logistical
equipment to combat Boko Haram,” said the officer.
Some of the soldiers disclosed that Boko Haram fighters have
more APCs than Nigerian soldiers on the frontlines.
One soldier wondered why military commanders in Abuja had
not mobilized the Nigerian Air Force to take out tanks used by Boko Haram
fighters despite the fact that the militants use these tanks in open
operations. “Our air force jets can easily locate them and bomb them,” said the
soldier, “so why are we not doing so?”
The question remains, is Nigeria really serious about
tackling the insecurity issue?
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