The Nigerian embassy in Delhi, India, has written to the
country’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs to see the two Nigerians that were
arrested in Punjab recently while on their way to Pakistan, allegedly to join
the Islamic State terrorist group.
The two youths from Kano, identified as Imran Kabeer and
Sani Jamiliu, are currently being detained by the Punjab Police in India.
The India police had arrested the two youths on suspicions
that they were on their way to join ISIS and that they attempted to enter
Pakistan without valid travel documents.
The suspects, who live in New Delhi, came to India on
student visas about a year ago. While Imran is pursuing a Bachelor of Arts
degree at the Karnataka State Open University, Sani is a Bachelor of Science
student of the Kerala-based Mahatma Gandhi University
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The spokesman, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Ogbole
Ahmedu-Ode, confirmed that the Nigerian embassy officials had applied to see
the suspects to “ascertain their claim of Nigerian nationality.”
“Our embassy in India has applied for consular access to see
the boys so that we can ascertain their claim of Nigerian nationality,” he
said.
In a related development, there are suspicions that the
Lebanese ISIS terrorist, Ahmed Al Assir, could have forged the Nigerian visa in
order to visit the country.
A diplomatic report shown to our correspondent on Wednesday,
indicated that Assir did not apply to the Nigerian embassy in Lebanon for visa
and that he must have forged the document.
It said there was no record anywhere that indicated that the
terrorist applied for the Nigerian visa.
President Muhammadu Buhari on Wednesday reportedly ordered
an investigation into how the Lebanese got the Nigerian visa found in his passport.
The terrorist, who had been on the wanted list of Lebanese
security forces, was arrested at the airport last Saturday while attempting to
visit Cairo, Egypt, en route to Nigeria on a forged Palestinian passport.
The diplomatic report explained that Assir, who was of
Palestinian extraction, had undergone surgery to alter his appearance so as to
evade detection by security operatives.
He was accused of involvement in the death of 17 Lebanese
soldiers and had been sentenced to death by the court in 2013.
The document further stated that the wanted terrorist had
been using different aliases to evade arrest and that his current pseudonym was
not on the watch list of the Lebanese security forces.
“Assir has been using the fake name, Rami Abdul Rahman
Taleb, to evade detection by security agencies in Lebanon. He did not apply to
the Nigerian embassy for visa, meaning that he must have forged the visa he had
on his fake passport when he was arrested with his companion, Khaled Sidani, at
the airport,” it stated.
Ahmedu-Ode said, “investigation is ongoing” to determine how
the terrorist came about the Nigerian visa.
Meanwhile, the Defence Headquarters on Wednesday denied
media reports that over 150 people from Kukuwa-Gari village were shot dead by
Boko Haram gunmen in Yobe State.
The DHQ said troops indeed killed four Boko Haram members in
a gunfight after the insurgents ran into a military ambush.
A statement by the acting Director, Defence Information,
Col. Rabe Abubakar, in Abuja pleaded with the media to always seek
clarifications on their information before publishing.
Abubakar’s statement read, “The truth of the matter is that
the military got an intelligence report concerning a planned attack by Boko
Haram on Kukuwa-Gari Village in Yobe State. Following the tip-off, troops and
civilian JTF laid ambush between Kukuwatashi and Kukuwa-Gari villages.
“The insurgents ran into them and a gun battle ensued in
which four Boko Haram members and one civilian JTF lost their lives. At the end
of the encounter, two AK 47 rifles and two motorcycles used by the Boko Haram
terrorists were recovered from them.
“The military is doing all within its power to protect lives
and property of Nigerians in any part of the country and thus, solicits
cooperation and understanding of the media to be partners in progress in this
noble task.”
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