Fayose Asked Buhari, You Said You Defeated Boko Haram, Where Are the Recent Bombings Coming From

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Governor Ayodele Fayose of Ekiti State, has sympathized with families of the army captain and five other soldiers reportedly killed on Saturday by Boko Haram insurgents during an attack on the Nigeria Army Brigade in Buni Yadi, Yobe State.

 

The governor, however, urged the Federal Government to stop deceiving Nigerians with stories of defeat of Boko Haram terrorists and return of Chibok girls.

 

Maintaining that the ongoing war against the Boko Haram insurgents could only be won through truthful information and cooperation of all Nigerians, he wondered “If indeed Boko Haram was already defeated,” as claimed by the federal government.

 

“Where are those suicide bombings and attacks coming from,” he asked in a release issued on Sunday by his Special Assistant on Public Communications and New Media, Lere Olayinka.

 

The statement said, “Nigerians are faced with many wars now, Boko Haram is just one of them and it is worrisome that we are not being told the truth about anything.

 

“It is like a patient telling his doctor that nothing is wrong with him. How will such patient be treated?”

 

Fayose said it was funny that the federal government was celebrating the recovery of Boko Haram flag as a sign of defeat of the insurgents while more daring attacks were being made by the same Boko Haram against the army, killing our gallant soldiers.

 

“The reality is that insecurity has increased in Nigeria more than President Muhammadu Buhari met it. Herdsmen have even killed more Nigerians than Boko Haram in the last one year while hundreds have died through extrajudicial killings by security agencies,” the governor said.

 

Speaking on the 21 Chibok girls, said to have been rescued, Fayose maintained that the real story behind the Chibok girls abduction will be told one day.

 

He challenged the federal government to tell Nigerians why the 21 rescued Chibok girls had not returned to their families since last year October.

 

“Have you ever seen anyone that will be in captivity for that long and won’t be eager to reunite with his or her family two months after regaining freedom?

 

“If the girls are truly Chibok girls, their freedom must be total. They must also be allowed to tell their own stories.

 

“However, as it appears, the girls may have moved from one captivity to another,” he said.