The Defence Headquarters has said that Special Forces have foiled an attempt by four suicide bombers to blast a Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation facility along the Maiduguri-Damboa Road, Mulai in Borno State on Tuesday.
The four suicide bombers, two other suspected terrorists and 15 civilians died in the incident. Five soldiers, and 17 others were wounded.
The Director of Defence Information, Maj.Gen. Chris Olukolade, who confirmed the incicident in an electronic mail, said one of the terrorists was arrested while eight vehicles were destroyed.
He said that three of the four cars laden with Improvised Explosive Devices exploded when soldiers fired at them.
The statement by the DHQ spokesman reads, “Four terrorists believed to be suicide bombers, apparently heading for an NNPC facility along Maiduguri-Damboa Road have died in their IED-laden vehicles.
“The explosions took place at Mulai on the outskirts of Maiduguri. Three of the four explosive-laden vehicles were demobilised by shots fired at them by soldiers at the checkpoint shortly before the explosions that rocked the area.
“Five soldiers were wounded while the civilian casualties have yet to be determined.”
He said that the DHQ would give details of the foiled suicide bomb attack later.
No fewer than 21 suspects died during the incident, which was blamed on the failure of the personnel on duty to observe standard security procedures.
Two operatives were also wounded by the inmates, most of whom are believed to be terror suspects.
A source in the Presidency said, “SSS has started investigating the jailbreak. It is expected to submit the report to the President and the NSA.”
It was learnt that the Chief Security Officer to the President and other high ranking security officers in the Presidency visited the SSS headquarters shortly after the incident for a preliminary assessment.
The Agence France Presse reported on Tuesday that the SSS were questioned on how the 21 detainees were killed.
The service has yet to reveal the charges the suspects faced or exactly how they came to be killed.
But the agency’s spokeswoman, Marilyn Ogar, told Raypower 100.5 FM that “the investigation is still ongoing.”
“We will determine who shot who and at what point and how many were shot by whom and for what reason, “ she added.
The PUNCH learnt on Tuesday that the exchange of gunfire was caused by the refusal of the terror suspects to surrender three high calibre weapons they seized from the SSS operatives in their escape bid.
An SSS source said that each of the Tavor rifle seized by the suspects, could carry as much as 90 rounds of live ammunition, which if well handled by a marksman, could do great damage to targets.
He said, “The suspects believed they could overwhelm the security personnel on duty with the loaded rifles that they seized from the operatives; and because they were desperate to escape, they were firing sporadically. But they did not succeed because our operatives are trained for such eventuality.”
Ogar had said that the guns seized by the inmates had more than 90 rounds of live ammunition.
Source: Punch

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