Boko Haram: Police officers’ wives demand husbands’ redeployment

Boko Haram: Police officers’ wives demand husbands’ redeployment

Wives of police officers fighting Boko Haram  in the North-East  marched through some streets in  Jos dressed in black attire,  protesting against the

Air force jet in pursuit of Boko Haram may have crashed, says NAF
Breaking: Boko Haram beheads 43 farmers in Borno
If you can’t do your job, we’ll mobilize hunters – Zulum to Nigerian army

Wives of police officers fighting Boko Haram  in the North-East  marched through some streets in  Jos dressed in black attire,  protesting against the killing of  their husbands by the  insurgents without anything being done by the government and are therefore asking for the redeployment of their husbands from the battling round, ThePunch is reporting

One of the protesters, who gave her name as Mrs Gabriel, said, “Our hearts are troubled. Every day, we are being turned into widows due to the fight against Boko Haram in the North-East, because our husbands who are deployed in the region are daily being killed by the terrorists without anything being done. The situation is unbearable to us.”

Another protester, Mrs Ilya, said, “Why are our husbands not being redeployed according to the terms of their engagement? Some of them have overstayed in their places of assignment, yet they just abandon them to their fate, making them easy preys to the terrorists who have sophisticated weapons. Many of them have been killed with the information kept secret from their families while those who managed to be alive are not allowed to visit their families for many years. The Federal Government should have pity on us and save our husbands from avoidable death. That is why we are calling on the  government  to do something about the redeployment of our husbands before we all become widows.”

Spokesman for the State Police Command, Ubah Ogaba, says that the state Commissioner of Police, Mr Isaac Akinmoyede, was making plans to summon the women for a stakeholders’ meeting with a view to finding out what the problems were and how they could be amicably resolved.