READ Why BBC Says It Might Be Hard To Know The Truth About Boko Haram In Nigeria

    The Baga killings last week are a case in point, with
    politicians and government officials offering vastly different information –
    from 150 dead to 2,000.
    News of another attack by Islamist militants from Boko Haram
    often starts as a vague one-liner as was the case on 3 January: “Attack on
    Baga. Loud gunfire heard.”
    This first bit of information often comes via social media.
    The challenge now is to find out the details and there are plenty of obstacles
    in the way of getting to the truth.

    There was shooting from every corner of the headquarters of
    the multinational task force”
    First up there has been no mobile phone connection in Baga
    for many months after the jihadists attacked mobile phone masts in the
    north-east.
    There are of course the officials whose job it is to tell
    the world what is going on.
    But for the first few days of the Baga crisis both the
    military spokesmen and government officials were silent or not picking up
    calls.
    Then, often with help from colleagues from the BBC’s Hausa
    service, the goal is to get through to people who have witnessed the violence.
    Fleeing

    On 4 January we spoke to a man who had walked for two days
    through the bush, eventually getting a lift to the relative safety of the
    biggest city in the area, Maiduguri, on a lorry.
    “There was shooting from every corner of the headquarters
    of the multinational task force,” he tells me, adding that the exchange of
    fire lasted hours.
    Then there are more testimonies from witnesses who say the
    military base was overpowered and then the gunmen started killing civilians in
    Baga town.

    Baga, seen here in April 2013, has been the scene of
    previous clashes between Boko Haram and the army

    The military recovered arms in a previous clash but later
    lost control of Baga again
    But every witness we speak to is fleeing for their life.
    They are not hanging around Baga to check exactly what’s happening so it is
    hard to be sure we are getting facts.
    Then a local politician from the area weighs in with more
    accounts of people being shot in Baga and others dying as they fled, their
    boats capsizing on Lake Chad.
    “I don’t know how many people have been killed,”
    says Senator Maina Maaji Lawan, who represents Borno North.
    “But at least 70% of the area I represent is in Boko
    Haram hands.”
    Four days after the attack and there is still silence from
    the government and the military.
    Totally untrue

    Then some journalists manage to meet the chief of defence
    staff, Air Chief Marshal Alex Badeh.
    It is not an organised news conference but a hurried
    exchange in a car park.
    He is asked about the attack on the military base in Baga.
    “Of course there was an attack,” he shoots back.
    “But don’t worry we are at work.”
    Can we retake Baga? Mr Badeh is asked.
    “Why not?” is the short reply. Seconds later he
    ducks into his car and is driven off.
    It is an unusual way for the capture of Baga to be confirmed
    officially although it is worth noting this is the same very senior military
    official who told us a few months ago that a ceasefire deal had been reached
    with Boko Haram which turned out to be totally untrue.
    More eyewitnesses fleeing Baga are telling the BBC about
    hundreds of bodies on the streets of Baga.
    Another local politician says 2,000 are dead. But he is not
    there to count them – nobody is because it is far too dangerous – so it is hard
    to believe him.
    Election focus
    Meanwhile in Paris news breaks of, initially at least, 12
    people being shot dead by gunmen. Within minutes President Francois Hollande is
    speaking to the world’s media offering some clarity and leadership.
    “This is an act of exceptional barbarism,” he begins
    and says security measures are in place to apprehend the perpetrators.
    Ten days since Baga was first attacked and there have also
    been several suicide bombings.
    But we have not heard a word from Nigerian President
    Goodluck Jonathan – except for a statement condemning the Paris attacks.
    The finance minister also appears keener to comment on
    events far away that have killed far less people.
    “Terrible incident. Our deepest sympathies to the
    journalists and their families. We are one with France in mourning,”
    tweets Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala with the hash tag #JeSuisCharlie.
    Meanwhile local TV stations follow every twist and turn of
    the presidential election campaign – some are lengthy programmes sponsored by
    rival political parties.

    Nigerian politicians appear more focused on their election
    campaigns than on security issues

    The media seem far more focused on the Valentine’s Day vote.
    That seems to be where the politicians are focused too.
    On Monday evening the government put out a statement saying
    “the number of people who lost their lives during the Baga attack has so
    far not exceeded about 150”.
    But we may never know how many have died in and around Baga.
    We know there will never be an investigation that will
    reveal the truth.
    It won’t be the first time we are not sure if 150, 300, 500
    or even 2,000 people were killed in a massacre in Nigeria.
    Source: BBC

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