The Federal Government has resorted to
recruiting forest guards to assist the Joint Task Force in combating
Boko Haram insurgents in the northern part of the country.
Most of the insurgents are believed to
be using routes cutting through forests in states like Borno, Yobe,
Taraba and Adamawa to smuggle arms into the country from Cameroon and
other neighbouring countries.
The Conservator General of National Park
Service, Mr. Haruna Abubakar, told the House of Representatives
Committee on Environment on Monday that the guards would help the JTF to
comb the forests for hideouts of insurgents.
Abubakar had appeared before the committee in Abuja to defend the 2014 budget of the agency.
The NPS had been classified as a para-military agency in January this year by the government.
According to Abubakar, the agency will
rely on its knowledge of the country’s forest terrain to conduct sweeps
with the military.
He informed the committee that the
agency controlled seven national parks in the country, covering about
24,000- square kilometres of land.
Abubakar said, “The National Park
Service has been playing a crucial role in intelligence gathering for
the country’s military in the North-East and the forest bordering Chad
and Cameroon.”
The committee, which is chaired by Mrs.
Uche Ekwunife, stated that insurgents operated camps in forests like
Sambisa, Mafa, Wulgo and Kirenowa, all in Borno State.
Sambisa forest camp which was said to
have been first discovered during a military raid in 2013, covers an
area of about 300-square kilometres.
The chairman of the committee expressed
concern that besides the loss of human lives and property, Nigeria was
losing revenue from tourism due to the activities of insurgents.
“We have to look inwards to find a way to protect our forests.
“It is regrettable that our forests have been turned into havens for insurgents,” she added.
Meanwhile, the Nigeria Baptist
Convention has appealed to Boko Haram sect to pursue the path of peace
for Nigerians to live in harmony.
The sect destroyed Mainok village, about
50 kilometres to Maiduguri in Borno State and killed 39 people in its
latest attack on Sunday.
During a press briefing organised by NBC
on Monday in Ibadan, the President of the church in Nigeria, Rev.
Samson Ayokunle, sympathised with the victims of the attack, adding that
the church would maintain its stance against all forms of terrorism in
the country.
Ayokunle called on the Federal Government to step up security in the northern part of the country.
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