Nigeria's top military officer on Monday called for a swift end to the Islamist insurgency gripping the country's north, as he was sworn in as the new chief of defence staff.
"The security situation in the
northeast must be brought to a complete stop before April 2014," Air
Marshall Alex Badeh said after his investiture ceremony in the capital,
Abuja.
Badeh, whose home state
Adamawa is one of three in Nigeria's northeast to have been under
emergency rule since last May, set the April deadline to avoid what he
said were "constitutional problems".
"We
don't want to go back to the (upper chamber of parliament) Senate to go
and start begging and lobbying (for an extension to emergency rule),"
he added.
"If we do our work cohesively, I can tell you, we will finish that thing (the counter-insurgency) in no time."
Boko
Haram have been fighting a drawn-out insurgency since 2009 in the
mainly Muslim north, attacking schools teaching a "Western" curriculum
and churches and claiming thousands of lives.
The group, which is considered an
international terrorist organisation by the United States, wants to
create an Islamic state in the north.
Badeh
replaced Admiral Ola Sa'ad Ibrahim, who headed the military from 2012
and who was sacked with the three other heads of the country's armed
forces last Thursday.
Two days
earlier, suspected Boko Haram insurgents detonated a car bomb in a
crowded market in the northeastern city of Maiduguri, killing at least
19 and wounding scores more.
In
December, Maiduguri, which is considered the group's spiritual home,
was also the scene of a daring early morning raid on military
installations near the city's airport.
President
Goodluck Jonathan did not explain his reasons for replacing the top
brass but there have been suggestions that he was dissatisfied with
their performance.
Badeh, 57, said he was pleased
that the three new army, navy and air force chiefs had already met to
discuss the issue and that it would make for a joined-up approach to the
threat.
"If three of you have
already met even before the takeover, then we have achieved everything.
I can only say that this thing is already won," he said.
The
former chief of army staff, Lt General Azubuike Ihejirika, said as he
stepped down that during his tenure, Nigeria had introduced the use of
unmanned aerial vehicles or drones.
"I
want to say very soon, the Nigerian Army, under the able leadership of
our new chief of army staff, Major General Kenneth Minimah, there will
be no hiding place for terrorists," he added.
Emergency
rule has largely succeeded in pushing the militants out of towns and
cities in the wider north but attacks are still frequent in more remote
areas, particularly in border regions.
Boko Haram suspects late Sunday attacked a community outside Maiduguri and killed 18 people, the local head of the village said.
Ibrahim
Modu said that the attackers raided the community along the Alau
Dam-Alau Ngawo Fate road in Jere municipality around 10:00 pm (2100
GMT).
"We lost 18 people at the end of the attack. We also lost about 100 houses, shops and grains stores to the attack," he said.
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