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Deadly rise of fraudulent surgeries in hospitals

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In this report, IBRAHIM ADAM examines how gaps in medical testing and neglected laboratory tests put patients at serious risk, with unnecessary surgeries and mismanaged treatments claiming lives

The death of 62-year-old Mrs Justina Awokumaka sparked much grief among her family members, one that is further deepened by alleged medical misconduct in an Abuja hospital.

Late Awokumaka, a resident of Bwari, reportedly died after what her family believes was an unnecessary appendectomy and subsequent complications during cancer treatment at a teaching hospital in Gwagwalada.

Her story was shared on February 25, 2026, by an X user, Tamunokuro Obietonbara (@sankofa360).

According to him, Awokumaka first experienced severe abdominal pain last year and went to the General Hospital in Bwari.

With no doctors available, she sought care at a private hospital the same day.

There, a doctor diagnosed appendicitis after a manual abdominal exam, without conducting a blood test or scan and scheduled her for surgery.

The appendectomy was reportedly performed a few days later. She initially appeared to recover, but within a week, her condition worsened as her pain intensified and her abdomen became rigid.

She was then transferred to the University of Abuja Teaching Hospital, where tests revealed she had cervical cancer, not appendicitis.

Doctors advised rest before cancer surgery, but four weeks later, preparations were halted due to dangerously low blood levels.

During her final hours, she underwent a blood transfusion after prolonged difficulty finding veins.

A doctor administered blood through a vein in her neck. About an hour later, her son noticed severe swelling, realising blood was leaking into the surrounding tissue.

Nurses were said to have delayed in responding, and when a doctor eventually assessed her, he allegedly downplayed the situation. She died later that night.

Obietonbara claimed that the first surgery was driven by greed, and proper laboratory examinations could have saved her life.

“The doctor who carried out the appendicitis surgery lied. She did not have appendicitis. He took advantage of the poor woman’s naivety. If the first surgery was not conducted and a proper examination had been carried out, she would have been alive today. First, she died from a doctor’s greed and second, from a doctor’s negligence,” he wrote.

Tests before surgery

But the chairman of the Nigerian Medical Association, Lagos State branch, Dr Babajide Saheed, said no qualified doctor would perform surgery without conducting the necessary medical laboratory investigations, except in life-threatening emergencies.

Saheed explained that surgeries are broadly classified as minor, intermediate or major and that the patient’s condition at the time determines the appropriate course of action.

“In cases where a patient is in severe pain or has a brain tumour causing life-threatening complications, surgery may need to be performed urgently to relieve pressure or remove the tumour. In such cases, there may not be time to wait for every routine test before proceeding.

“In the case of a gunshot wound, doctors may need to operate immediately to save the patient’s life. While emergency tests may be conducted simultaneously, the medical team does not delay life-saving intervention. The priority is to stabilise and treat the patient,” he said.

Saheed also addressed what he described as a widespread misunderstanding of the term surgery, noting that some procedures are highly specialised and carefully planned.

He cited procedures such as the Latissimus Dorsi Flap, which require detailed preoperative assessment and thorough evaluation of the patient’s overall health.

“Patients may expect a quick solution, but as professionals, doctors must thoroughly evaluate the patient’s overall health and determine whether they are fit for surgery after a laboratory test. This assessment is also carried out by the surgeon and must also be reviewed by the anesthesiologist before the operation can proceed,” he said.

The NMA chairman warned that doctors who ignore proper medical procedures risk endangering lives and facing serious consequences.

Women share experiences

A student of Tai Solarin University of Education, Ogun State Damilola Onaniyi, said a heart condition diagnosis in 2023 almost altered the course of her life.

After experiencing episodes of shortness of breath, she underwent an electrocardiogram and echocardiogram.

She said a sonographer informed her that the results indicated cardiomyopathy.

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Onaniyi said, “For a moment, that single word almost became my whole reality. I was dead scared.”

She was unsatisfied, which made her seek another cardiologist’s opinion, where an evaluation revealed that her symptoms were linked not to her heart but to an ulcer caused by helicobacter pylori infection.

“If I had stopped at the first diagnosis, I would have lived in fear for nothing. Sometimes you really do have to listen deeper and keep asking questions,” she said.

A chef, Gina Ehikodi-Ojo shared a similar experience, saying that a doctor had diagnosed her with appendicitis following an examination.

Reluctant to undergo surgery, she opted for a further scan, which turned out to be premenstrual condition.

“I decided to do a computed tomography scan at Mecure or anything that will help a doctor see whatever might be happening in my body. That is the respect I have for Dr Chiemeka Sidney Iroegbu forever. He was very young and was able to read those images and said there was nothing wrong. It was just pre-menstrual syndrome at the end of the day. That first doctor would have cut me for nothing,” she said.

An entrepreneur, Nwadinuba Francisca recalled being told as a junior secondary school pupil that she had an ovarian cyst requiring urgent surgery after presenting with abdominal swelling. But her mother insisted on a second opinion.

“After looking at the scan and properly examining me, it turned out to be stool that formed whatever. I just had to take a laxative and I was okay after a day or two,” she said.

According to an online hospital, the Cleveland Clinic, ovarian cysts are common growths that develop on or inside your ovaries.

A radio presenter at Kapital FM 92.9, Nnamonu Obianuju described a two-year ordeal at the Federal Medical Centre, Abuja, where her elder sister was treated for leukaemia.

She said her sister underwent chemotherapy with little improvement, even as her abdomen became increasingly swollen.

“Two weeks before her death, it was found out that she had an ovarian cyst and that it had become malignant. My sister would have been alive today if only the ovarian cyst was removed on time,” she said.

A consultant in the Division of Paediatric Surgery at Usman Danfodiyo University Teaching Hospital, Sokoto State, Dr Yazeed Muhammad, warned that performing surgery without laboratory evaluation could lead to serious complications or even death.

“No surgeon will perform surgery without adequate evaluation of the patient. You need a lab test to know what is wrong with the patient. However, any doctor who tries that is a quack, and it will have severe consequences for both the patient and the doctor. Sometimes, the patients are left with serious complications that they battle for their entire life, or it leads to death,” he told Saturday PUNCH.

A nurse at the Abubakar Tafawa Balewa University Teaching Hospital in Bauchi State, Amina Ahmed, explained that preoperative tests, including complete blood count, blood grouping, infectious disease screening and anaesthesia assessment, are mandatory before any surgery.

“No surgeon will operate in our hospital without first ensuring that the patient has undergone the necessary laboratory tests. Anyone who attempts to operate without these tests will face disciplinary action, including the possible revocation of their medical license,” she told Saturday PUNCH.

Children at risk

A parent, Oluwakemi Adefolurin, said her ten-year-old daughter was diagnosed with appendicitis at a private hospital after scans were conducted.

But because the patient was a child, she was referred to a general hospital, where it was discovered that her daughter was free of an appendix after another scan.

“General hospital did their own scan after two days of admission and nothing like an appendix was found. Thank God the private hospital does not operate on children. They would have carried out an unnecessary surgery on a ten-year-old,” she said.

A business woman, Adediran Atinuke also recounted how her newborn niece developed jaundice shortly after being delivered by caesarean section at a private hospital.

She said the family’s concerns were initially dismissed until a referral was made to a paediatrician.

“They took a blood sample from her toe and she was confirmed dangerously jaundiced. They advised immediate phototherapy. Thankfully, my niece was fine after four days under the bluish light,” she said.

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Another business woman Adebola Adeola recalls being rushed to a hospital in Lekki after a doctor pressed her abdomen and declared she had appendicitis.

She said the doctor advised immediate surgery to prevent a rupture and save her life, but her mother insisted on another evaluation at a government hospital.

“We went to a government hospital where a scan was done and there was nothing like appendicitis. This is eight years now and I never had any surgery of such,” she said.

Patients also lie

A medical laboratory scientist in training at the Irrua Specialist Teaching Hospital, Ifuhemi Olotu, warned that patients’ dishonesty could complicate diagnosis and treatment.

Olotu explained that there is a standard procedure for patients undergoing surgery, and upon arrival, patients are instructed to perform tests before seeing a doctor.

“Sometimes, patients meet the doctors first. When they complain about symptoms, the doctors do not immediately diagnose or prescribe medication. Instead, they send the patient to the laboratory. Based on the complaints, the doctors can document the case, consider possible causes and order appropriate tests such as blood, urine or stool analysis. Only when the results are returned will treatment begin,” she told Saturday PUNCH.

Olotu raised questions about the accuracy of some patient claims, citing appendicitis as a common example.

“Are we certain the patient’s complaint was truly related to appendicitis, or did the patient suggest that she was having an appendix problem? To be honest, some patients can be misleading,” she said.

Fraudulent surgeries for profit

A Canada-based Nigerian doctor, Dr Arinze Onwumelu, alleged that some medical practitioners in Nigeria falsely diagnose patients with appendicitis and perform deceptive surgeries to make quick money.

Onwumelu made the claim in a two-minute, 29-second video posted on his Instagram account, Dr Zo (@official_doctor_zo), stating that he had personally witnessed the practice while working in the country.

According to him, the alleged misconduct involves taking patients to the operating theatre, making a superficial skin incision and closing it without them having appendicitis.

He said the presence of a surgical scar could mislead doctors into assuming that the appendix had already been removed.

“There are a couple of doctors back home, in Africa generally, in the process of trying to hustle, as they call it, they tell patients they have appendicitis and take them to the theatre, and just slice the skin, close it and ask the patient to go.

“In a real sense, they don’t have appendicitis; it’s just a way of trying to make quick money. I am 100 per cent sure about this, because I’ve seen it,” Onwumelu said.

The doctor warned that such actions could put patients’ lives at risk, as doctors may initially rule out appendicitis when a scar is present, delaying life-saving treatment.

“There are things you should not do as a medical doctor, no matter where you are, no matter the situation, no matter the circumstances,” he said.

Onwumelu stressed that honesty with patients is essential, even when a conclusive diagnosis cannot be made.

“In medicine, the sin of commission is worse than the sin of omission. You should tell the patient you don’t know what’s wrong with them and let them go home, than to tell them that they have appendicitis, take them to the theatre, just do a skin incision, close them, collect money and let the patient go. If it’s not appendicitis, tell the patient it’s not appendicitis. If you don’t know, say you don’t know. You cannot put somebody to sleep, cut off the skin and still leave the appendix intact,” he added.

Neglect of lab tests

The National President of the Association of Medical Laboratory Scientists of Nigeria, Dr Casmir Ifeanyi, warned that the continued neglect and suppression of medical laboratory services in the country was costing lives and worsening the already fragile health system.

Ifeanyi said evidence-based medical practice remained the global standard and required that all treatments and patient management be guided by empirical data generated by medical laboratories.

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“The challenge in Nigeria is that within the health system, the managers continue to undermine medical laboratory diagnosis. Across the globe, the standard practice today is evidence-based medical practice. That means before initiating any form of treatment or patient management, it must be based on empirical data provided by medical laboratories,” he told Saturday PUNCH.

The laboratory scientist noted that globally, 70–80 per cent of clinical decisions rely on labo ratory data, but described Nigeria’s continued dependence on exploratory surgery as outdated and dangerous.

According to him, exploratory surgery involves operating on a patient without a confirmed diagnosis to determine the cause of illness.

“In one case in South East Nigeria, a woman was operated on because she was told she had cancer. When they operated, there was no cancer. They could not even suture her properly. As I speak, she is wasting away and may soon pass on. What we see is experimentation with human life in Nigeria,” he said.

He maintained that the scale of dysfunction within the country’s healthcare system surpasses the damage caused by insurgency and violent crime.

“Ask those who go abroad for care. Do they operate without first knowing exactly what laboratory investigations show? Do they even give a painkiller without data generated through medical diagnostic investigations? It does not happen. The problem in the Nigerian health sector is worse than Boko Haram, banditry, kidnapping or other forms of extremism. An individual walks into a Nigerian hospital alive and may come out as a dead body,” he said.

A public health expert, Damilola Fajinmi, said the primary mandate of a hospital is to save lives, warning that bypassing laboratory tests before surgery breaches best practices.

Fajinmi explained that surgical interventions are complex processes that require strict adherence to established safety protocols to minimise risk and ensure favourable outcomes.

“The truth is, the primary mandate of hospitals is the protection of patient life. Surgical interventions are a complex process where safety is predicated on a comprehensive diagnostic workup,” she told our correspondent.

She noted that every surgical candidate must complete a risk assessment before any operation to detect conditions that could cause complications.

Fajinmi acknowledged that the country’s healthcare system faces systemic challenges, including limited resources and diagnostic delays, which create pressure points within service delivery.

She, however, stressed that such constraints must not result in compromised standards of care.

“No doubt there are systemic challenges in Nigeria, as well as resource limitations and even diagnostic delays. This causes pressure points within healthcare delivery. However, skipping essential diagnostics is a breach of surgical best practices,” she added.

Grave criminal offence

A Senior Advocate of Nigeria, Dr Monday Ubani, told Saturday PUNCH that failure to carry out necessary medical tests before surgery is a criminal offence.

He emphasised that certain prerequisite tests are essential to assess a patient’s health before any operation.

“I’m a lawyer, but I understand that there are procedures for laboratory tests and conducting surgeries. Within the medical process, if someone fails to conduct a medical examination or investigation, even if they are not a medical doctor, it can indicate a level of medical negligence,” Ubani said.

He noted that performing an operation without laboratory tests, operating on the wrong diagnosis, and causing death constitutes absolute negligence and could attract both civil and criminal consequences.

“Before an operation, steps must be taken to determine the problem. If these steps are skipped, it raises questions about whether the person performing the surgery is a medical doctor and whether they have committed medical negligence, because this can have both civil and criminal consequences.

“Before an operation is performed, certain prerequisite tests must be carried out to assess the health of the person to be operated on. If these tests are not conducted, we must question whether the person performing the surgery is a qualified medical doctor. If the person is not qualified, then negligence becomes a serious issue, though it also depends on the type of operation and the procedures involved,” he said.

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Crime

US court jails Nigerian six years for $5m COVID-19 fraud

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A United States District Court has sentenced a 34-year-old Nigerian, Adepoju Babatunde Salako, to six and a half years’ imprisonment for his role in a $5m COVID-19 pandemic relief fraud.

PUNCH Metro learnt on Thursday from a statement published on the website of the United States Department of Justice that Salako, who resides in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, was handed a 78-month federal prison term after pleading guilty to wire fraud conspiracy and money laundering conspiracy.

The statement added that as part of his plea agreement, Salako also agreed to plead guilty to seven additional counts of wire fraud in the District of Alaska.

It noted that the court further ordered him to pay $2,581,002.50 in restitution to victims of the fraud.

“The United States Attorney’s Office for the District of Colorado announces that Adepoju Babatunde Salako, 34, of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, was sentenced to 78 months in federal prison after pleading guilty to one count of wire fraud conspiracy and one count of money laundering conspiracy.

“As part of the plea agreement, Salako also agreed to plead guilty to seven counts of wire fraud in the District of Alaska. The defendant was ordered to pay $2,581,002.50 in restitution to the victims of his crimes,” the statement read.

According to court documents, Salako participated in the scheme for most of 2021, exploiting economic relief measures introduced during the COVID-19 pandemic.

“Throughout most of the year 2021, Salako was part of a conspiracy that stole more than $5m from the Paycheck Protection Program, the Economic Injury Disaster Loan programme, and 30 state unemployment programmes through several complex schemes,” the statement added.

Providing further details, the statement said Salako and two accomplices used stolen identities to obtain fraudulent loans and unemployment benefits.

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“In one scheme, Salako and two co-conspirators used information belonging to identity theft victims to fraudulently obtain PPP loans and unemployment benefits, and submitted fraudulent applications for EIDL loans.

“Salako’s role was to receive money from romance scam victims and government agencies and launder the proceeds, primarily to China and Nigeria, for a fee of approximately 25 per cent,” it stated.

Reacting to the sentence, the United States Attorney for the District of Colorado, Peter McNeilly, condemned the fraud and reiterated the government’s resolve to prosecute offenders.

“Mr Salako and his criminal associates exploited innocent people and stole millions of dollars from American taxpayers. We are committed to finding and prosecuting fraudsters and, as this sentence demonstrates, these criminals will pay a high price for their actions,” he said.

Also commenting, the Special Agent in Charge of the United States Postal Service Office of Inspector General, Northeast Area Field Office, Matthew Modafferi, warned that severe penalties await those who abuse public trust.

“The sentence imposed on the defendant stands as a clear warning that serious consequences await anyone who exploits government resources to commit criminal acts,” the statement added.

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Crime

Group claims responsibility for Borno massacre, abduction of 300 residents

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A yet-to-be-identified group has claimed responsibility for the attack on Ngoshe, a community in Gwoza Local Government Area of Borno State, where scores of soldiers and civilians were killed and over 300 abducted on Wednesday night.

PUNCH had reported that on Wednesday night, the terrorists stormed and burned down a military base in the community, shot sporadically and burned down homes and shops.

In a video obtained by our correspondent on Friday morning, the group, comprising five men, said they were determined to claim the territory and would celebrate the coming Eid-el-Fitr in the central mosque located in the community.

Speaking in Hausa on behalf of the group, one of them acknowledged that they beheaded men and women during the attack.

He said, “In the name of Allah, the most merciful and most beneficial.

“We thank God Almighty for helping us to succeed in our mission in Ngoshe. Today we are inside the central mosque in Ngoshe.

“People in this town are saying that we cannot conquer Ngoshe. With the help of God, we have already conquered the town.

“By the grace of God, we are going to stay in Ngoshe and make it part of our province and we are going to do the Eid-el-Fitr Salah after the end of Ramadan in Ngoshe.”

He also disclosed that many residents were abducted, with the intention of converting them into slaves.

“We have slaughtered males and females in Ngoshe and we have enslaved the others. It was Almighty Allah that said that we should enslave them and go with them,” he stated.

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The group further vowed to extend its terror activities to Maiduguri and Abuja.

The men also released videos from the scene of the attack, showing them beheading young men and killing children and women.

Following the attack, PUNCH reported that residents of the Ngoshe community expressed strong concern over the condition of elderly people and dead bodies left in the village after the terrorists dispersed residents.

The survivors, who are currently scattered across communities in the local government, said they left behind all their belongings during the escape.

The attack, according to eyewitnesses, lasted for hours before the air component of Operation Hadin Kai mobilised to disperse the terrorists into the forest.

The spokesperson of the Borno State Police Command, ASP Nahum Daso, confirmed the attack to PUNCH, saying many residents were still missing.

“Although some unknown number of civilians yet to be ascertained were also affected or killed. Some are still missing and probably some were abducted and taken towards the Mandara Mountains,” he stated.

Meanwhile, the state Commissioner of Information and Internal Security, Usman Tar, exclusively told PUNCH that efforts were ongoing to determine the actual number of victims.

“On missing persons, we are in the process of verification; the actual figure is yet to be ascertained,” he said in a telephone interview.

According to him, the state government had rolled out palliatives to support the survivors currently taking refuge in Pulka, another town in Gwoza LGA.

He said, “There is a standing protocol by the state government for providing support to people who are affected by conflicts. In the case of Ngoshe, the people were assembled at Pulka, a nearby town, and immediate support came from the local government.

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“In addition, the state government, through the State Emergency Management Agency, has dispatched palliatives to all the victims and each household. The items include rice, sugar, millet and blankets. They will arrive tomorrow.”

“Currently, the people are comfortable and the military is on top of the situation, ensuring a security corridor for the transportation of items to the victims,” Usman assured, adding that healthcare and sanitation officials had also been dispatched to the location to prevent a disease outbreak.

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Crime

Hundreds still missing after Boko Haram attack in Borno

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Suspected Boko Haram terrorists have abducted more than 300 residents during a deadly attack on Ngoshe community in Gwoza Local Government Area of Borno State midnight on Wednesday, forcing thousands of survivors to flee to neigbouring Pulka community, where many have been forced to sleep on roads and in school buildings for fear of further attacks.

The PUNCH had earlier reported that suspected Boko Haram insurgents killed an unspecified number of civilians and abducted several women after launching an attack on a military post in the community.

Sources told our correspondent that the terrorists first stormed the military base in Ngoshe before unleashing violence on residents at about 1am on Wednesday.

Eyewitnesses said the assault lasted for several hours, leaving panic and destruction in its wake, before the air component of Operation Hadin Kai was deployed to repel the attackers and disperse them into the surrounding forest.

They added that the insurgents burnt several houses before retreating.

According to reports on Thursday, the Nigerian military also killed scores of the Boko Haram terrorists after their attack on the Ngoshe military base, which reportedly left nine soldiers dead.

After the raid, surveillance aircraft tracked the insurgents along known escape routes and carried out precision airstrikes on their positions, killing more than 50 fighters, the reports added.

The spokesperson for the Borno State Police Command, ASP Nahum Daso, confirmed the attack to The PUNCH, noting that many residents were still unaccounted for.

“Some civilians whose number is yet to be ascertained were affected or killed during the attack. Several others are still missing and may have been abducted and taken towards the Mandara Mountains,” he said.

Daso added that authorities were still working to determine the full extent of the abductions.

“As of now, we have not completed the process of establishing the total number of those taken away. If reports about the Chief Imam being missing are confirmed, we will verify and update you accordingly,” he said.

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As of the time of filing this report, efforts to obtain an update from the spokesperson of the police and the spokesperson of Operation Hadin Kai, Lt. Col. Sani Uba, were unsuccessful as calls placed to his phone were not answered.

Meanwhile, the Senator representing Borno South Senatorial District, Ali Ndume, condemned the attack during an interview with journalists on Thursday, revealing that more than 100 residents were still missing.

According to the senator, the insurgents overran the military formation in Ngoshe before unleashing violence on the community.

“The military base in the community (Ngoshe) was dislodged, with some major equipment destroyed. Residential houses and property worth millions of naira were also set ablaze,” Ndume said.

“As it is, details about the unfortunate Ngoshe incident are still sketchy, but information at my disposal revealed that many of the fleeing terrorists were neutralised by the air component of the Joint Task Force North-East, Operation Hadin Kai.”

He added that the attack also claimed the lives of several prominent members of the community.

“Unfortunately, the Chief Imam of Ngoshe and some elders, as well as soldiers, were among those slaughtered or killed,” the lawmaker said.

Ndume further disclosed that many residents remained unaccounted for following the raid.

“More than 100 people are still missing or abducted during the attack, while thousands of civilians, mostly women and children, have been displaced and are currently taking refuge in Pulka community,” he added.

Some survivors who fled the violence and are currently sheltering in Gwoza described the attack as devastating and appealed for urgent humanitarian assistance.

The District Secretary of Ngoshe, Shuaibu Dabawa, said the scale of the abduction was massive, claiming that more than 300 residents were taken away by the insurgents.

“When they attacked, we heard sporadic gunshots and immediately fled into the bush for safety, where we spent the entire night,” Dabawa said.

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“More than 300 people were abducted by the terrorists during the attack. There is currently no military presence in Ngoshe, which has heightened security concerns,” he added.

Dabawa also expressed deep concern about the fate of elderly residents left behind in the town.

“Our immediate worry is that some elderly people remain trapped in the community alongside several dead bodies. Many of us escaped with nothing except the clothes we were wearing. The town has been completely deserted,” he said.

He added that displaced residents were now scattered across Pulka, with many sleeping in open spaces while others have taken shelter at the Central Primary School in the town.

“We are appealing for urgent military reinforcement and food assistance for the affected families,” he said.

One of the survivors, Audu Bello, said it was difficult to immediately determine the exact number of those abducted without proper verification from affected families.

“It was a mass abduction. Only families whose relatives were taken can give a clearer picture of the number of victims,” Bello said.

“For many of us, we managed to escape after hearing sporadic gunshots. It was an unfortunate incident that has devastated many families. Several households have now been split apart, with some members in Pulka while others are scattered in unknown locations seeking safety,” he added.

Another survivor, Amina Halidu, lamented the harsh living conditions confronting displaced residents who fled to Pulka following the attack.

According to her, many of the victims are currently sheltering at the Central Primary School in Pulka under extremely difficult conditions.

“Many people are now camped at Central Primary School in Pulka. There is no water, no food and no proper shelter. Most of the displaced persons are women and children. We are appealing for urgent government intervention,” she said.

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When contacted for comments, the Director-General of the Borno State Emergency Management Agency, Ali Abdullahi, neither answered calls nor responded to text messages as of the time this report was filed.

The Borno State Commissioner of Information and Internal Security, Usman Tar, told The PUNCH on Thursday night that the state had intervened and provided support for the survivors.

He said, “There is a standing protocol by the state government for providing support to people that are affected by conflicts.
“In the case of Ngoshe, the people were assembled at Pulka, a nearby town to the area, and immediate support came from the local government.”

Tar added, “In addition, the state government, through the state emergency management agency, has dispatched palliatives to all the victims and each household. The items include rice, sugar, millet and blankets. It will get to them tomorrow (today).

“Currently, the people are comfortable and the military is on top of the situation and making sure that there is a security corridor for the transportation of the items to the victims.

“We have also dispatched healthcare and sanitation officials to the location to make sure there is no outbreak of a pandemic.”

On the number of missing persons, the commissioner added, “We are in the process of verification, the actual figure is yet to be ascertained.”

Meanwhile, our correspondent learnt that the Chief of Army Staff, Lt-Gen Waidi Shuabi, will visit the Ngoshe community on Friday.

Security sources, who confirmed the visit to The PUNCH, said the COAS would interface with the victims and access the situation.

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