during the crossfire between State Security Services, SSS
personnel and insurgents at the agency’s headquarters in Abuja.
Nigerian Pilot gathered that the suspect was having the
cell phone on him at the time he was killed.
Security officials, who expressed shock over the
incident, noted that such high calibre terror suspects are always denied access
to luxuries such as mobile telephones, television sets, newspapers and other
communication devices while in detention.
It was learnt that one of the soldiers who assisted the
SSS to foil the attack, which the Department of State Security, DSS, described
as an attempted jailbreak, heard a GSM phone ringing where one of the dead
insurgents was lying and picked it up.
No fewer than 21 persons, including 18 insurgents were
killed during the attack. DSS spokesman, Marilyn Ogar, said three of the
victims were civilians while the injured included SSS operatives.
Prior to the attack, Nigerian Pilot learnt that 100
insurgents were said to be detained in SSS bunkers.
A security operative who pleaded anonymity said it was in
the process of “neutralisng” the terrorists, that “we found a cell phone
ringing on one of the bodies. During the gun battle we heard a mobile phone
ringing. And when order was restored, we discovered that the ringing tone was
from the pocket of one of the neutralised insurgents. The caller’s number was
saved as ‘office’. It kept ringing, but we didn’t pick the call because it
might be a booby trap.
“They (DSS) refused to allow us leave with the telephone.
They claimed it was their exhibit. The million-dollar question is: How did an
insurgent in SSS underground cell get a mobile phone?” he queried.
The officer was quick to add that the ringing mobile
telephone suggested that the attack was not only premeditated, but fuelled,
thereby raising concerns that Boko Haram sect members might have infiltrated
the DSS.
The discovery of one suspected insurgent in one of the
cars in the DSS parking lot, he added, nearly caused a big problem.
“Having disarmed the man, we wanted to take him for
questioning. DSS personnel objected, claiming the man was one of their key
witnesses. They however couldn’t explain why he was hiding in one of the cars,”
he said.
SOURCE-NIGERIAN PILOT
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