Borno State
governor Kashim Shettima has described his recent trip to Gwoza for the burial
of the late Emir of Gwoza, Alhaji Shehu Idrisa Timta, who was killed by Boko
Haram gunmen on Friday, as most petrifying. Leadership News reports.
He said travelling through such a perilous
route where insurgents attack at will on a daily basis demands more that
courage.
According to
him “If I say I was not petrified travelling through that 135km of road to
Gwoza, I would be lying because that road had been designated a no-go area for
about two months now due to the incessant attacks and killings that occur
there,” said Shettima. “But leadership requires courage and sacrifice. Courage,
I believe, is not only about the absence of fear but the belief that there is
something greater than that fear.”
For Governor
Shettima, it was a duty to attend the burial of the first-class monarch who was
murdered in the most gruesome manner on Friday. He was accompanied on the trip
by about 150 soldiers and police special squads and they travelled through the
most dangerous route in the state to get to Gwoza.
Even family
members of the deceased monarch who had either relocated to Maiduguri or were
living there could not travel on their own to pay their last respects to their
murdered monarch. They had to wait at the outskirts of Maiduguri until the
governor’s convoy came to lead the way before they too trailed behind.
Leadership reporter who was among the few journalists allowed to be on the trip to Gwoza
counted more than 16 towns, villages and hamlets that were completely deserted
along the 135km trip to Gwoza. Most of the communities had suffered continuous
attacks until the villagers had to flee to other towns and villages.
Shettima
said: “The sight of those deserted villages was very pathetic; it was
devastating. But we believe no matter how long the night tarries, it must give
way to the light of the dawn. Yes, stormy the weather might be, but it won’t
rain for ever; in the no distant future, we will have an enduring peace in
Borno. My consolation lies in the fact that we have over 1,000 years of
recorded history. We strongly believe that from the ashes of this destruction,
Borno shall rise again.”
LEADERSHIP
can authoritatively report that despite the choking presence of the military
and the police, the trip to Gwoza could not have been possible had the
Civilian-JTF not taken the lead by moving ahead of the convoy in a bid to
“clear the road” as they said.
The journey
even became more terrifying when at some point after Bama town one of the
armoured personnel carriers of the military escort team had to break down, and
then it had to be towed by the second APC on the trip.
The journey
that was supposed to take about one hour ended up taking three hours as the
soldiers had to periodically stop even in a flashpoint area to do what they
described as procedural checkings during such VIP trip.
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