German schoolgirl Linda Wenzel who joined Isis faces execution in Baghdad: 'I ruined my life'


Her parents are desperate for her to be tried in Germany.

Linda Wenzel being captured by Iraqi soldiers in Mosul. They accused the 16-year-old German schoolgirl of being an Isis sniper

A schoolgirl who fled Germany with an Isis soldier when she was 15 years old could be executed in Baghdad after being captured in Mosul earlier this year. She has now met with her mother and sister as she languishes in a Baghdad prison.

Pulsnitz teenager Linda Wenzel, now 17 years old, described joining Isis as the decision that "ruined her life". Her role with Isis was to whip and abuse women who were not dressed appropriately, the Daily Mail reported.

She was smuggled into Syria through Istanbul after forging her mother's signature to buy a ticket from Germany.

Her mother, 48-year-old Katharina Wenzel, embraced Linda after a moment of awkward hesitation. "I do not know how I came up with the stupid idea to go to the Islamic State," Linda said to her mother. "I have ruined my life."

Linda was dressed in black clothing and wearing a head scarf. Her mother greeted her with a small Christmas-themed toy.

According to metro.co.uk, Linda's father Reiner Wenzel was greatly concerned his daughter would be executed. "I want so much that my Linda comes home again healthy. I will always be there for her. I fear for her. The authorities absolutely have to bring her to Germany so that she can get a fair trial."

If Linda avoids a death sentence, she could still spend the next 10 years in a Baghdad jail. She will front the court in January.

Saudi Arabia has the best military equipment money can buy — but it's still not a threat to Iran

Saudi Arabia has one of the most impressive arsenals in the world, large ambitions, and a very capable rival. What it doesn't have is realistic capability.

Saudi special forces soldiers with G36C assault rifles.  (Saudi Press Agency)

Saudi Arabia has some of the greatest military equipment money can buy, but its military is still not seen as a threat to its longtime rival Iran.Saudi Arabia's military has not proved capable of effectively fighting back Iran-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen.Its arsenal is designed for a large conventional war — not proxy fighting.

In the past few years, Saudi Arabia has led an intervention in Yemen's civil war, been the driving force behind a diplomatic crisis between Qatar and its neighbors, and involved itself in the politics of Lebanon.

All of these things appear to have one common objective: to push back against the influence of Iran.

But experts say Saudi Arabia's ambitions are limited by its military, which is considered an ineffective force even though the kingdom is one of the world's largest spenders on defense.

"The fact is, Iran is better at doing this stuff," said Michael Knights, a Lafer fellow at The Washington Institute who specializes in the military and security affairs of Iraq, Iran, and the Persian Gulf.

"There's nobody in the Iranian General Staff that's afraid of Saudi Arabia on the ground," Knights said.

Saudi Arabia's struggles in Yemen — where its years-long conflict with the Houthi rebels has no end in sight — reveals its shortcomings against an adversary like Iran

"What we are really talking about is how they stack up in a proxy war," Knights said. "It's what they are doing in the region nowadays."

Iranian soldiers marching in a 2011 parade in Tehran to commemorate the anniversary of the Iran-Iraq war.  (Reuters)

One of the largest spenders on defense

Saudi Arabia's military faces two main problems. It is too large, making it more susceptible to organizational and quality issues, and its arsenal is designed for a large conventional war rather than the proxy wars of the 21st century.

For all Saudi Arabia's military ineffectiveness, it's hard to blame the kingdom's equipment. Last year, Saudi Arabia was the fourth-largest spender on defense products in the world, just behind Russia.

According to IHS Jane's, a British publishing company specializing in military, aerospace, and transportation topics, Saudi Arabia was the world's largest importer of weapons in 2014.

Data from the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute shows that Saudi Arabia was the second-largest importer of weapons in both 2015 and 2016. Arms imports into the kingdom have increased by over 200% since 2012, according to the institute.

The weaponry being bought is not low quality, either. The majority of Saudi Arabia's military hardware is bought from US companies. In fact, 13% of all US arms exports in 2016 were headed into the kingdom. Companies from the UK and Spain were the second- and third-largest sellers.

A Royal Saudi Air Force Eurofighter Typhoon.  (Wikimedia commons)

The Royal Saudi Air Force arsenal includes Eurofighter Typhoons, perhaps the most advanced fighter jet fielded by European militaries, and American F-15 Eagles, the undisputed king of the skies for three decades and still formidable. The Saudis even have their own model of the Eagle — the F-15SA (Saudi Advanced), which just started being delivered this year.

The Royal Saudi Land Forces, the Saudi army, have everything from M1A2 Abrams tanks and M2 Bradley Fighting Vehicles to AH-64D Apache Longbow and UH-60 Black Hawk helicopters.

Virtually every vessel in the Royal Saudi Navy was built in American shipyards, specifically for Saudi Arabia. Its newest frigates, the Al Riyadh class, are modified versions of France's La Fayette-class frigate.

Saudi Arabia is one of the best-equipped nations in the world. Yet the Saudi military does not strike fear into the hearts of its adversaries, or would-be foes.

Saudi special forces soldiers.  (Vice/YouTube)

The proxy war in Yemen

Evidence of the Saudi military's shortcomings can be seen just south of the Saudi border in Yemen.

Almost three years after Saudi Arabia, supported by other Gulf and Arab states, launched a military intervention to support Yemen's ousted president, Abdrabbuh Mansur Hadi, Iran-backed Houthi rebels are still active and continue to hold Yemen's largest city and capital, Sana'a.

Additionally, the Houthis have proved capable of launching high-profile attacks against the Saudis. Those include multiple cross-border raids into Saudi Arabia, successful attacks on Emirati and Saudi navy ships, and the launching of ballistic missiles into the heartland of the kingdom.

In a more recent embarrassment, a report from The New York Times suggested that a ballistic missile fired by the Houthis that exploded at an airport in the Saudi capital of Riyadh was actually not shot down as previously claimed by the Saudi military.

The state of the War in Yemen earlier this month. Red represents territory held by the Yemeni government backed by the Saudi-led coalition, white for Al-Qaeda affiliates, black for ISIS, and green for Iran-backed Houthi rebels.  (Wikimedia commons)

Why there has been no victory in Yemen

The Saudis have had a hard task in Yemen. They have to operate in the Houthi heartland against a well-trained, well-funded, and well-supplied fighting force.

Saudi Arabia, however, has not deployed significant land forces into Yemen that would be required to win on the battlefield.

"We don't know if the Saudi military is able to have a significant impact on the Yemen war, because we've only seen the deployment of Saudi airpower," Knights told Business Insider.

"Generally, an airpower-only campaign is not going to have a great impact — particularly in this type of complex terrain with an enemy who is very adept at hiding from airpower and often looks like civilians," he said.

Saudi troops at their base in Yemen's southern port city of Aden in 2015.  (Reuters)

Knights estimates that 10,000 to 20,000 troops would be required to have the desired affect. Yet the Saudi military has not deployed its ground forces — most likely because the Saudi leadership knows that, as Knights says, they "suffer from significant weaknesses."

These weaknesses include a lack of logistical equipment and experience needed to carry out such a campaign.

"They have no experience in an expeditionary operation," he said, noting that the Desert Storm campaign against Iraq — which Saudi Arabia did contribute to — was largely an American effort.

Additionally, Saudi ground forces as a whole are not trained well enough to where they would be able to perform successfully in large-scale operations. As such, a Saudi ground force in Yemen may cause more harm than good.

Bilal Saab, the senior fellow and director of the Defense and Security Program at the Middle East Institute, told Business Insider that Saudi Arabia understood the potential harm of its ground forces. In an email, Saab said Saudi Arabia would not deploy large contingents of ground forces "because their casualties would be severe and they most probably would cause tremendous collateral damage in Yemen."

Saudi artillery firing toward Houthi positions from the Saudi border with Yemen in 2015.  (Reuters)

What can be done

In Knights' view, Saudi Arabia needs to downsize its military, focus on quality recruitment and training, and make units that are capable of fighting alongside and training local allies.

Today, local militias and tribal groups form the majority of the ground force battling the Houthis, and few if any Saudi soldiers assist them — save for a few special forces units.

"As a result," Knights says, "there is no credible military pressure on the Houthis."

The proxy battle in Yemen is just one example of Iran's growing influence across the Middle East. Hezbollah, for instance, is better armed and organized than Lebanon’s official military. Hamas, engaged in ongoing conflict with Israel, is also publicly backed by Iran and a number of militias in Iraq's Popular Mobilization Units receive training, funding, and equipment from their neighboring country.

Saudi Arabia's arsenal, though impressive, also needs to be built up with its desired applications in mind. For now, those seem to be proxy wars against an enemy that is rarely in uniform, as opposed to one fought against a conventional army from the Cold War era.

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Saudi Arabia has the best military equipment money can buy — but it's still not a threat to Iran

pulse.ng

Dec 16, 2017 1:00 PM

Saudi Arabia has one of the most impressive arsenals in the world, large ambitions, and a very capable rival. What it doesn't have is realistic capability.

Saudi special forces soldiers with G36C assault rifles.  (Saudi Press Agency)

Saudi Arabia has some of the greatest military equipment money can buy, but its military is still not seen as a threat to its longtime rival Iran.Saudi Arabia's military has not proved capable of effectively fighting back Iran-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen.Its arsenal is designed for a large conventional war — not proxy fighting.

In the past few years, Saudi Arabia has led an intervention in Yemen's civil war, been the driving force behind a diplomatic crisis between Qatar and its neighbors, and involved itself in the politics of Lebanon.

All of these things appear to have one common objective: to push back against the influence of Iran.

But experts say Saudi Arabia's ambitions are limited by its military, which is considered an ineffective force even though the kingdom is one of the world's largest spenders on defense.

"The fact is, Iran is better at doing this stuff," said Michael Knights, a Lafer fellow at The Washington Institute who specializes in the military and security affairs of Iraq, Iran, and the Persian Gulf.

"There's nobody in the Iranian General Staff that's afraid of Saudi Arabia on the ground," Knights said.

Saudi Arabia's struggles in Yemen — where its years-long conflict with the Houthi rebels has no end in sight — reveals its shortcomings against an adversary like Iran

"What we are really talking about is how they stack up in a proxy war," Knights said. "It's what they are doing in the region nowadays."

Iranian soldiers marching in a 2011 parade in Tehran to commemorate the anniversary of the Iran-Iraq war.  (Reuters)

One of the largest spenders on defense

Saudi Arabia's military faces two main problems. It is too large, making it more susceptible to organizational and quality issues, and its arsenal is designed for a large conventional war rather than the proxy wars of the 21st century.

For all Saudi Arabia's military ineffectiveness, it's hard to blame the kingdom's equipment. Last year, Saudi Arabia was the fourth-largest spender on defense products in the world, just behind Russia.

According to IHS Jane's, a British publishing company specializing in military, aerospace, and transportation topics, Saudi Arabia was the world's largest importer of weapons in 2014.

Data from the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute shows that Saudi Arabia was the second-largest importer of weapons in both 2015 and 2016. Arms imports into the kingdom have increased by over 200% since 2012, according to the institute.

The weaponry being bought is not low quality, either. The majority of Saudi Arabia's military hardware is bought from US companies. In fact, 13% of all US arms exports in 2016 were headed into the kingdom. Companies from the UK and Spain were the second- and third-largest sellers.

A Royal Saudi Air Force Eurofighter Typhoon.  (Wikimedia commons)

The Royal Saudi Air Force arsenal includes Eurofighter Typhoons, perhaps the most advanced fighter jet fielded by European militaries, and American F-15 Eagles, the undisputed king of the skies for three decades and still formidable. The Saudis even have their own model of the Eagle — the F-15SA (Saudi Advanced), which just started being delivered this year.

The Royal Saudi Land Forces, the Saudi army, have everything from M1A2 Abrams tanks and M2 Bradley Fighting Vehicles to AH-64D Apache Longbow and UH-60 Black Hawk helicopters.

Virtually every vessel in the Royal Saudi Navy was built in American shipyards, specifically for Saudi Arabia. Its newest frigates, the Al Riyadh class, are modified versions of France's La Fayette-class frigate.

Saudi Arabia is one of the best-equipped nations in the world. Yet the Saudi military does not strike fear into the hearts of its adversaries, or would-be foes.

Saudi special forces soldiers.  (Vice/YouTube)

The proxy war in Yemen

Evidence of the Saudi military's shortcomings can be seen just south of the Saudi border in Yemen.

Almost three years after Saudi Arabia, supported by other Gulf and Arab states, launched a military intervention to support Yemen's ousted president, Abdrabbuh Mansur Hadi, Iran-backed Houthi rebels are still active and continue to hold Yemen's largest city and capital, Sana'a.

Additionally, the Houthis have proved capable of launching high-profile attacks against the Saudis. Those include multiple cross-border raids into Saudi Arabia, successful attacks on Emirati and Saudi navy ships, and the launching of ballistic missiles into the heartland of the kingdom.

In a more recent embarrassment, a report from The New York Times suggested that a ballistic missile fired by the Houthis that exploded at an airport in the Saudi capital of Riyadh was actually not shot down as previously claimed by the Saudi military.

The state of the War in Yemen earlier this month. Red represents territory held by the Yemeni government backed by the Saudi-led coalition, white for Al-Qaeda affiliates, black for ISIS, and green for Iran-backed Houthi rebels.  (Wikimedia commons)

Why there has been no victory in Yemen

The Saudis have had a hard task in Yemen. They have to operate in the Houthi heartland against a well-trained, well-funded, and well-supplied fighting force.

Saudi Arabia, however, has not deployed significant land forces into Yemen that would be required to win on the battlefield.

"We don't know if the Saudi military is able to have a significant impact on the Yemen war, because we've only seen the deployment of Saudi airpower," Knights told Business Insider.

"Generally, an airpower-only campaign is not going to have a great impact — particularly in this type of complex terrain with an enemy who is very adept at hiding from airpower and often looks like civilians," he said.

Saudi troops at their base in Yemen's southern port city of Aden in 2015.  (Reuters)

Knights estimates that 10,000 to 20,000 troops would be required to have the desired affect. Yet the Saudi military has not deployed its ground forces — most likely because the Saudi leadership knows that, as Knights says, they "suffer from significant weaknesses."

These weaknesses include a lack of logistical equipment and experience needed to carry out such a campaign.

"They have no experience in an expeditionary operation," he said, noting that the Desert Storm campaign against Iraq — which Saudi Arabia did contribute to — was largely an American effort.

Additionally, Saudi ground forces as a whole are not trained well enough to where they would be able to perform successfully in large-scale operations. As such, a Saudi ground force in Yemen may cause more harm than good.

Bilal Saab, the senior fellow and director of the Defense and Security Program at the Middle East Institute, told Business Insider that Saudi Arabia understood the potential harm of its ground forces. In an email, Saab said Saudi Arabia would not deploy large contingents of ground forces "because their casualties would be severe and they most probably would cause tremendous collateral damage in Yemen."

Saudi artillery firing toward Houthi positions from the Saudi border with Yemen in 2015.  (Reuters)

What can be done

In Knights' view, Saudi Arabia needs to downsize its military, focus on quality recruitment and training, and make units that are capable of fighting alongside and training local allies.

Today, local militias and tribal groups form the majority of the ground force battling the Houthis, and few if any Saudi soldiers assist them — save for a few special forces units.

"As a result," Knights says, "there is no credible military pressure on the Houthis."

The proxy battle in Yemen is just one example of Iran's growing influence across the Middle East. Hezbollah, for instance, is better armed and organized than Lebanon’s official military. Hamas, engaged in ongoing conflict with Israel, is also publicly backed by Iran and a number of militias in Iraq's Popular Mobilization Units receive training, funding, and equipment from their neighboring country.

Saudi Arabia's arsenal, though impressive, also needs to be built up with its desired applications in mind. For now, those seem to be proxy wars against an enemy that is rarely in uniform, as opposed to one fought against a conventional army from the Cold War era.

PHOTO Of Osinbajo's Wife, Kneeling Down To Greet Gowon Everyone Is Talking About

Wife of the Vice President, Dolapo Osinbajo, was down of her kneels on Thursday to greet former Head of State, General Yakubu Gowon, rtd, at the Aso Rock Christmas Carol held yesterday night.

The photo is currently trending on social media as people acknowledged her traditional knowledge and respect for elder despite carrying the position of a first lady.


The terrorist attacks that shocked the world this year

In 2017, terrorists went on a rampage, striking here, there and everywhere.

Scene like this is has become a daily occurrence in Nigeria.  (Foreign Policy)

The capacity of terrorists to inflict maximum damage became quite a thing all through 2017.

France, the United States, Nigeria, the Middle East and the UK all had their fair share of gun and bomb attacks; as governments around the world continue to grapple with the evil that has become terrorism.

Terrorists did deploy trucks, bombs, guns and knives as they killed innocents and attacked everywhere all year.

2017 was a pretty bloody and violent one.

1. Boko Haram attacks Nigeria

A bomb blast scene in Maiduguri  (Tribune)

 

Terrorist sect Boko Haram continued to mount soft target attacks on civilian populations all through 2017.

In July, Boko Haram attacked ten trucks conveying military personnel and oil workers at Magumeri, Gubio local government area of Borno State.

Local reports say only five persons escaped this attack.

In May, seven people were killed when Boko Haram fighters stormed remote villages in Mussa and shot at villagers in Askira-Uba LGA, Borno state. An unspecified number of people were also reportedly kidnapped.

In June, multiple attacks rocked the eastern axis of Maiduguri. At least 10 persons didn’t survive the barrage of explosives and gunfire.

Through June and December, Boko Haram killed in Borno, Yobe and Adamawa.

2. New York truck attack

The suspect in the New York truck attack used to drive for Uber  (REUTERS/Andrew Kelly)

 

On October 31, 2017, a terrorist rammed a rented truck into cyclists and runners along the Hudson River's bike path, killing eight and injuring 11 others.

The attacker was later found to have links with terrorist sect ISIS.

3. Manchester Terror attack

Scene of Manchester attack  (AFP)

 

On May 22, 2017, at least 22 people were killed and 59 others left seriously injured when a terrorist detonated an explosive device at a Manchester Arena filled with concert goers.

Teenage US singer, Ariane Grande, had just finished headlining a concert at the Arena when the explosive went off.

4. Paris Shooting

Shooting in Paris  (AFP)

 

On April 20, 2017, a lone gunman killed a police officer on the Champs Elysees in Paris.

The attacker was shot dead at the scene before he could inflict more damage.

ISIS claimed responsibility for the killing.

5. Stockholm attack

Police at scene of Stockholm killing  (AFP/File)

 

In April, four people were killed and at least 15 injured when a terrorist drove a truck down a busy shopping street in Stockholm, Sweden.

39-year-old Rakhmat Akilov, a failed asylum seeker from Uzbekistan, confessed to the crime.

Akilov confessed to being a member of ISIS and told police investigators that he had “achieved what he set out to do”.

6. Westminster attack

British police grapple with ISIS terrorism  (REUTERS/Hannah McKay)

 

On March 22, 2017, Khalid Masood mowed down pedestrians on Westminster bridge, London, killing four people and injuring many others.

The Express UK reported that “The knifeman crashed his car into the railings outside parliament, got out and ran into New Palace Yard where he stabbed a brave police officer to death.

“Masood was shot dead by armed police”.

7. Louvre, France attack

Louvre in France came under attack as well  (AFP)

 

A terrorist wielding a knife was shot dead after he tried to attack soldiers guarding the Louvre in Paris, France on February 3, 2017. 

The attacker chanted ‘Allahu Akbar’ and drew a machete on the soldiers after being told he could not gain access to the Louvre Carousel shopping centre.

He was carrying two backpacks on him.

8. Finsbury Park terror attack

Finsbury attack came under attack too  (AFP)

 

On June 19, 2017, a van driver mowed down Muslim worshippers on Seven Sisters road which lies a few meters away from the Finsbury Park mosque in London.

One man died from the attack while 10 others were left badly injured.

9. London bridge terror attack

London bridge terror attack  (AFP)

 

On June 3, 2017, three men wielding knives mowed down pedestrians on the London bridge and embarked on a killing spree in pubs and restaurants around 10pm.

10. US mass shootings

Candle lights for the departed  (AFP/File)

 

According to Business Insider, there were over 307 mass shootings in the United States in 2017.

In November, at least 26 people were killed and several others left injured when a man approached the First Baptist Church in Sutherland Springs, Texas, and opened fire on the congregation.

A Business Insider report reads as follows: “The Texas incident marked the 307th mass shooting in 2017, according to the nonprofit Gun Violence Archive, which tracks shootings in the US. The US has had nearly as many mass shootings as days in 2017.

“Americans are more likely to die from gun violence than many leading causes of death combined, with some 11,000 people in the US killed in firearm assaults each year”.

On October 1, 2017, a gunman opened fire on a crowd of concert goers at the Route 51 Harvest Music festival on the Las Vegas strip in Nevada, killing 58 and injuring 548 others.

11. New York subway explosion

New York subway came under attack from an ISIS lover  (AP Photo/Andres Kudacki)

 

27-year-old Akayed Ullah blew up a homemade explosive in a pedestrian subway tunnel in Midtown, Manhattan on December 11, 2017.

The blast was detonated in an underground walkway linking two subway lines beneath the Port Authority bus terminal.

The suspect was identified as a Bangladeshi national who has taken permanent residence in the US since 2011 on an F43 family immigrant visa.

A law enforcement official with direct knowledge of the investigation told CNN that the suspect had pledged allegiance to ISIS.

The suspect also said he acted in response to Israeli actions in Gaza.

No lives were lost in this attack, but five persons were treated for minor injuries.


Residents Of Borno Community Remain Shocked After Boko Haram Killed 6 Soldiers, Carted Away 2 Gun Trucks

The residents of Mainok village, 59 kilometers from Maiduguri, capital of Borno State, are still in shock following Wednesday’s killing of six soldiers by Boko Haram insurgents, who also carted away two Nigerian Army gun trucks.

The insurgents stormed Mainok attacked military base at a time all the soldiers had allegedly gone out. The attack, according to the villagers, lasted one hour. A resident, Bukar Kundiri, told SaharaReporters that they still feel unsafe. Their sense of panic is on account of the ease with which the insurgents carried out the attack and went away with weapons.

"We are preparing to take families to Maiduguri. We are not safe. If they could go away with military vehicles unhindered, anything can happen. If they want us to stay, there is much that needs to be done. We can't afford to lose our family members after what Boko Haram did to us three years ago,” said a resident.

A member of the Civilian Joint Task Force (CJTF) disclosed that Boko Haram members were regularly sighted on farmlands. These sightings, he said, were reported to Army authorities, who did nothing. He explained that they foresaw Wednesday’s attack, which he said proved that area is massively unsafe. He added that when the insurgents arrived on Wednesday, they assured villagers of their safety, saying they were only after soldiers.

"There was confusion everywhere on Wednesday but they told us not to worry. They said they came for soldiers, not villagers. But we could not trust them; they killed soldiers and wounded four others," Kundiri told SaharaReporters.

An impeccable security source told SaharaReporters that six soldiers were killed and nine others seriously wounded, with the insurgents going away with plenty of ammunition and two gun trucks. The source disclosed that the corpses of the soldiers were received at the military hospital.

Army troops claimed that they killed many terrorists and injured many, but their colleagues went away with their corpses and the injured, a claim that disappointed many residents.

The Borno State Police Command, in a statement, said the attack was repelled by combined forces of military and SARS personnel. 

“Two civilians (one Baba Kachalla and another identity not yet known) sustained gunshot wounds and are responding to treatment at University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital," said the statement.

However, a resident told SaharaReporters that the police lied.

"I was sad when Mr. Damien Chukwu, the Borno State Police Command spokesman, said only two civilians were injured. I don't really understand why they would lie about this."

Destroyed home by Boko Haram in Borno State

UK Demands Implementation Of Reports On Buhari Govt Massacre of 1000 Shia Muslims In Nigeria

The United Kingdom has demanded that the Nigerian Government implements the reports of the various commissions set up to probe the killing of no fewer than 350 members of the Shia sect in Zaria, Kaduna State.

According to information made available by the commission set up by the Kaduna State Government under the leadership of Governor Nasir el-Rufai, over 1,300 persons died during a face-off between the Nigerian Army and the Shia sect members in December 2015.

Members of the sect, led by Sheikh Ibrahim el-Zakzaky, under the umbrella of the Islamic Movement in Nigeria, had prevented the convoy of the Chief of Army Staff, Lieutenant General Tukur Buratai, from passing through the road in front of the sect’s headquarters in Zaria.

Stating the position of the United Kingdom was its High Commissioner in Nigeria, Paul Arkwright, on his Twitter handle on Thursday.

Arkwright said it was time the reports of the incident is implemented.

Both the Federal and Kaduna State Governments set up panels to probe the incident.
Arkwright tweeted: “It is two years since the #Zaria incident when some 350 Nigerians were killed by the military.

“Since then there have been several investigations, reports and recommendations.

“But a number of recommendations remain to be implemented.
“We call for accountability on all sides.”

Soldiers Capture 167 Insurgents, Recover Weapons/Explosives (Photos)


@POLITICSNGR
PoliticsNGR has been furnished with a statement from the Nigerian Army detailing the capture of 167 insurgents in the Lake Chad Islands.
Read the full statement below;
"Troops of Operation Lafiya Dole have intensified the ongoing offensive on Boko Haram enclaves in the Islands around the Lake Chad region. The offensive which commenced about two weeks ago with coordinated air and artillery bombardments on Boko Haram enclaves while ground troops moved in to clear the areas, is yielding positive results, as several insurgents have been killed and 167 insurgents who were fleeing from the offensive have been captured by troops.
Troops also extricated and profiled 67 women and 173 children who revealed during profiling exercise that they are family members of insurgents who fled, following troops' offensive. Arrangement is ongoing to hand them over to IDP camp authorities after preliminary investigations are concluded.
Meanwhile in the past two months, troops of Operation Lafiya Dole have sustained ongoing precursor operations and have conducted long range fighting patrols and ambushes seeking out and clearing BHT hideouts in Saada and Juwei in the fringes of northern Borno. During the operations troops intercepted and arrested 53 fleeing insurgents who have been profiled and are currently helping with investigations. Fifteen insurgents have also willingly abandoned the insurgent group, describing it as a futile struggle and have surrendered to troops of Operation Lafiya Dole within the period.
Our heartfelt sympathy and condolences go to families and relations of troops as well as civilians who paid the supreme price in the encounters and callous suicide bomb and Improvised Explosive Device (IED) attacks by the terrorists.
While troops continue relentlessly in the ongoing offensive to decisively rid the northeast hinterlands of insurgents, members of the public are implored to be more security conscious and vigilant in their homes, communities, places of worship , markets and other places of business to identify strange persons as well as any suspicious activity and promptly report same to security agencies. They are also urged to remember to “Say something, if you see something”.
Boko kill them terrorist jawe
Muslims are imbecilic hypocrites. Why the use of cell phones, AK-47 and even vehicles when you are Boko haram?
12 Likes
but i cant finds any weapon on them
2 Likes
why do they need solar panels?
1 Like
Jibril659:
why do they need solar panels?

to charge their brains
18 Likes 1 Share
Yeligray:
to charge their brains

ctrl+delete
Why are they still keeping them?
These Terrorists sef!
Fighting useless and meaningless war is just programmed into their brain thru religion.
The North will never recover from this self destructive mode it programmed itself, never!
6 Likes
Duru1:
Muslims are imbecilic hypocrites. Why the use of cell phones, AK-47 and even vehicles when you are Boko haram?

You are deluded by saying moslems.
1 Like
Looks like the military is just rounding up anybody
8 Likes
That is very good
You are deluded by saying moslems.

Please are Christians also Boko Haram? Talk about delusion, you won its medal.
11 Likes
Hahahaha. The $1billion is working. APC should be a good story line for nollywood movies.
I can never believe or accredit this government.
Looking at those pictures, you'll notice that these are IDPs being shown as boko haram terrorists. Those items have been posted sometimes ago. Bokoharam terrorists can't be fighting with slippers on their feet.
13 Likes 1 Share
lol! they all look malnourished.
our president's kinsmen
1 Like
These men are really doing a great job over there in the Northern Insurgency zones.
God Bless, Keep and Protect Our Soldiers!
1 Share
Mass arrest
1bn$ must drop
6 Likes
Our 1billion dollars is now working right? Unto d next story pls
3 Likes
These people are gypsies, not terrorists.
1 Like
So Qur'an, solar panels is part of their weapons nawa o nothing we won't see in this my country
...and you think an educated and upright Christian would have typed this?
Duru1:
Muslims are imbecilic hypocrites. Why the use of cell phones, AK-47 and even vehicles when you are Boko haram?

2 Likes
Hmmmmmmm
Good news
A child that swore never to allow his mother sleep should be ready for the compulsory general vigil .
Are these people Nigerians?
RIP
Duru1:
Muslims are imbecilic hypocrites. Why the use of cell phones, AK-47 and even vehicles when you are Boko haram?

atleast u ar up to 18 year.
News to keep social media active into the new year
Tithe
P'square
Hijab
$1 billion
Boko haram
Fayose
1 Like
Quick question...when the British conquered your lands, your forefathers did not tell you they had Bibles?
danvon:
So Qur'an, solar panels is part of their weapons nawa o nothing we won't see in this my country

1 Like
I could not find the weapons recovered. Hope they are not innocent
No single weapon
Swisscoinng:
Quick question...when the British conquered your lands, your forefathers did not tell you they had Bibles?

My lands or our lands, I wasn't told they had Bibles it was the missionaries that had Bibles
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"I earn more than your Father"



Talks about woju singer Kiss Daniel and the saga with his former employer’s G worldwide is no longer new to us, as damning revelations showed that the former was being paid the sum of thirty thousand naira monthly until his contract was revisited and he started getting up to 40 percent of the finances he was raking in.

His former record label, G-Worldwide of course, fired back, and claimed they have paid over N120 million to the singer so far. 

Now trouble started when a twitter user quizzed former label mate Sugarboy on his current salary structure and the ‘hola hola’ singer fired back saying he earns more than the father of the twitter user .

See below;


"I earn more than your Father"



Talks about woju singer Kiss Daniel and the saga with his former employer’s G worldwide is no longer new to us, as damning revelations showed that the former was being paid the sum of thirty thousand naira monthly until his contract was revisited and he started getting up to 40 percent of the finances he was raking in.

His former record label, G-Worldwide of course, fired back, and claimed they have paid over N120 million to the singer so far. 

Now trouble started when a twitter user quizzed former label mate Sugarboy on his current salary structure and the ‘hola hola’ singer fired back saying he earns more than the father of the twitter user .

See below;


Photos Of Some Nigeria Student Of Auchi Polytechnic Who Made A Car





Some Team in Mechanical Engineering, Auchi polytechnic Auchi designed an Amazing moving car 



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Lady calls off traditional wedding just a day to the event in Delta

A bride identified as Blessing Esakpe, has shocked everyone with her decision to call off her traditional wedding to her ‘man’ Comrade Monday Ezuzu, just a day to tying their nuptial knots in Ozoro, Delta State.

According to the Facebook user (name withheld) who shared the shocking story, the lady was asked 7 times if that’s her decision, and she didn’t back down on it. He wrote;

“Today i received worst shock of my life. A friend invited me for his traditional marriage at ozoro Delta state and when the d bride was called out n asked if she will marry d man her reply surprised us all.SHE SAID NO she won’t marry him. They asked her 7 tyms n she kept to her word NOoooooo. So what’s the advice to the man bcoz tomorrow is the wedding n evri arrangement has been made concerning the wedding.”