Security forces in Maiduguri said they have made a huge haul in their
campaign against the Boko Haram sect, arresting a top sect leader,
Shuaibu Mohammed Bama, and linking him to “a serving senator’s house
along Damboa Road, GRA Maiduguri.”
The Joint Task Force, JTF, in the Borno capital which said Mr. Bama
was arrested on Thursday at about 11a.m, described him as “a high
profile Boko Haram Commander who has been on the list of wanted
terrorists operating between Bama and Maiduguri.”
The Task Force offered nothing but vague suggestions regarding the
“serving senator” which it refused to name but independent findings and
security sources in Borno have told PT the unnamed senator is Ahmed
Khalifa Zanna.
Mr. Zanna was elected on the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party
to represent Borno Central in the National Assembly. The 57-year-old
politician defeated the former governor of the state, and sworn enemy of
the Boko Haram, Ali Modu Sheriff, to emerge senator. The insurgent
group has privately and publicly accused Mr. Sheriff of being one of the
masterminds of the unrest in Maiduguri and has called for his
prosecution.
Mr. Zanna will not be the first Borno PDP Senator to be linked with
the Boko Haram. Another senator, Mohammed Ndume, was arrested by
security operatives for having alleged link and sponsoring the insurgent
group. He is currently being prosecuted.
Sources in Maiduguri confirmed that Mr. Ndume and Mr. Zanna each have
a house in Damboa Road, an area where many Maiduguri elites also have
homes.
A resident of Maiduguri said though Mr. Ndume’s house is more popular in the area, his colleague also has a house there.
“Everybody in Maiduguri knows that Ndume has a house in Damboa, maybe
because of the type of person he is. But Senator Ahmed lives there
too,” the resident, who did not want his name mentioned for security
reasons, said.
We also learnt that Mr. Zanna is from Bama Local Government Area of the State; same as the arrested alleged Boko Haram leader.
It is however not clear if Mr. Zanna truly has a relationship with
the Boko Haram as multiple sources in Maiduguri said even Mr. Ndume, who
is being prosecuted, has no direct relationship with the Boko Haram.
Efforts to get the Senate spokesperson, Eyinnaya Abaribe, to comment
on the latest development were unsuccessful as Mr. Abaribe’s phone was
switched off.
The Senate had declared its support for Mr. Ndume despite his alleged link with the Boko Haram and his prosecution.
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