The
number of policemen killed by cultists in Assakio village, Nasarawa,
rose to 30 on Thursday while the Assistant Commissioner of Police,
Mohammed Momoh, who led the security agents to the shrine of the Ombatse Militia cult group has been declared missing.
Nasarawa State Commissioner of Police,
Abayomi Akeremale, told journalists on Thursday that the bodies of the
30 policemen had been recovered and deposited at the Dalhatu Araf
Specialist Hospital in the state capital Lafia.
Most of the bodies were said to have been burnt beyond recognition.
Momoh, a number of policemen and State
Security Service operatives were still to be accounted for 24 hours
after they were attacked by members of Ombatse militia group.
Also on Thursday, wives of policemen in
the state protested on the streets of Lafia over the murder of their
husbands by the cultists.
The Nasarawa State Police Public
Relations Officer, Michael Ada, confirmed that the protesting wives had
blocked the Akwanga-Lafia Federal Highway at the Squadron 38 MOPOL Base
area in Akwanga.
Akeremale said he could not confirm yet
whether the ACP had died but that his men were still searching for the
man who led the security agents to confront members of hitherto unknown Ombatse Militia on Tuesday.
Governor Tanko Al-Makura on Wednesday
had reported to Vice-President Namadi Sambo that a team of policemen
sent to arrest members of the cult were ambushed and killed. He had told
the VP that 20 policemen were killed.
The CP said, “We cannot say for now that
he (Momoh) is dead; we are still searching, the rescue operation is
still on; and we cannot actually confirm he is dead, we can only say he
is missing for now.
“Investigation is ongoing to ascertain
the whereabouts of other officers, no arrests have been made (yet) but
efforts are being made to bring the perpetrators of this dastardly act
to book.
“We believe that members of the group are still in the bush around the area, and we would do all we can to smoke them out.”
The CP said nine police patrol vehicles were also burnt.
The Presidency on Thursday announced
that President Goodluck Jonathan had decided to cut short his ongoing
foreign trip and return home.
Special Adviser to the President on
Media and Publicity, Rueben Abati, in a statement said Jonathan would
return to the country to personally oversee efforts to tackle the fresh
challenges to national security.
The statement read, “In view of recent
developments at home in Nigeria, President Goodluck Jonathan has cut
short his visit to South Africa and aborted his state visit to Namibia
which was due to start today.
“The President is returning to Abuja
immediately to personally oversee efforts by national security agencies
to contain the fresh challenges to national security which have emerged
this week in Borno, Plateau and Nasarawa states.
“President Jonathan will on arrival meet
with the Chief of Defence Staff, the Service Chiefs, the
Inspector-General of Police and heads of national security services to
review the security situation in the country.”
This is even as a source in the
Presidency said intelligence reports on the Nasarawa killings had
allegedly indicted Al-Makura for poor handling of the situation. The
governor is said to have been neutral in the killings.
“He merely ran to the Villa to brief the
VP as a way of exonerating himself after things have boomeranged in his
state,” the source said.
Meanwhile, the Inspector-General of
Police, Mohammed Abubakar, has ordered a manhunt for the killers of the
security personnel and directed all the field commanders and special
units to apprehend the criminals.
He condemned the attacks on security men
in Nasarawa, Bayelsa and Borno states, and described them as an attack
on the collective will of Nigerians.
A statement by the Deputy Force Public
Relations Officer, Frank Mba, said the police were poised to bring to an
end the reign of terror and lawlessness in the country.
The statement read, “Police High Command
received early this morning news of the unprovoked and brutal killing
of scores of policemen who were on legitimate assignment in Nasarawa
State. This disturbing, condemnable and highly distressing incident,
coming closely after similar ones in Bayelsa and Borno states, has
thrown up a new and emerging threat in the delicate task of policing our
country.
“We consider the attack not just an
attack on the Nigeria Police and its officers and men but an attack on
the collective will of Nigerians to protect and preserve our dear
fatherland; this we have vowed to put an end to.
“Consequently, the IGP has directed all
the field commanders and special units including Assistant
Inspectors-General of Police and Commissioners of Police to harness all
resources available within their domain to apprehend the criminals.”
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