The Niagara Falls Review

More than 60 killed in extremist attack on Nigeria mourners

- ISMAIL ALFA ABDULRAHIM

MAIDUGURI, NIGERIA — Suspected Boko Haram extremists killed more than 60 people in an attack on villagers leaving a funeral in northeaste­rn Nigeria, a local official said Sunday.

Muhammad Bulama, council chair of the Nganzai local government area, told reporters that 11 other people were wounded during the attack at midday Saturday.

He called it a reprisal after villagers and civilian self-defence forces fought off a Boko Haram ambush in the area two weeks ago, killing 11 extremists.

Nigerians last week marked the grim 10-year anniversar­y of the Boko Haram insurgency, which has killed tens of thousands of people, displaced millions and created one of the world’s largest humanitari­an crises.

The extremists are known for mass abductions of schoolgirl­s and putting young women and men into suicide vests for attacks on markets, mosques and other high-traffic areas.

The extremists, who seek to impose a strict Islamic state in the region, have defied the claims of President Muhammadu Buhari’s administra­tion over the years that the insurgency has been crushed.

The violence also has spilled into neighbouri­ng Chad, Niger and Cameroon.

Nigeria’s military did not immediatel­y comment.

Bunu Bukar, secretary of the Borno Hunters Associatio­n, a self-defence group, said the extremists roared up on Saturday on motorbikes and opened fire on villagers returning from offering funeral prayers for a relative. He said his colleagues had recovered nearly two dozen bodies.

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