The Nigerian President, Dr. Goodluck Jonathan has appointed a former military general from the Muslim north as his defence minister, as he
looks to combat an increasingly bloody armed conflict with Boko Haram.
Wednesday's
appointment of Aliyu Gusau may lead to a change in strategy in the
raging battle against the Muslim rebel group.
The increasingly and deadly attacks by Boko Haram made the position to be vacant since June 2012, when Jonathan sacked
Mohammed Bello, former defence minister.
Gen. Aliyu Gusau, a former chief of army staff, has twice served as Nigeria's
national security adviser, from 1999 to 2006 and in 2010 before quitting
to challenge Jonathan for the ruling party's nomination ahead of 2011
elections.
Professor Dapo Thomas, of Lagos State
University said the appointment is in order
According to him "What we have seen is that the Nigerian military cannot defeat
Boko Haram with just force," .
"It is all about intelligence now. Because of
(Gusau's) background, I cannot think of a better candidate for the
defence post," he said.
While Gusau's relationship with the president was said to be
strained, analysts suggested Jonathan selected Gusau to reshape his
strategy to defeat the armed rebels who have already killed 500 this
year.
President Jonathan replaced his entire military top brass in January and the
military has issued statements promising new strategies to combat the
group. While the violence has continued at a relentless pace.
On Monday, suspected Boko Haram fighters burned 11 people to
death inside their homes in northeastern Nigeria, where frequent attacks
have claimed at least 130 lives in the past four days alone.
The attack on Jakana village in Borno state occurred about 10km from a
village where 39 people were killed on Saturday, said Ahmed Zannah, a
Nigerian senator.
Violence has escalated in recent weeks in three northeastern
Nigerian states that have been under emergency rule for more than nine
months.
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