Arab News

Army ordered to boost response to Boko Haram

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ABUJA: Nigeria’s military has been ordered to strengthen its response to Boko Haram after 69 people were killed in an ambush earlier this week, the government said on Sunday.

Vice President Yemi Osinbajo held emergency talks with top brass to discuss Tuesday’s attack, which targeted an oil exploratio­n team in the northeaste­rn state of Borno.

The attack was the worst since Feb. 2 last year, when 58 people were killed in a twin suicide bomb attack at a camp for the displaced in the Borno town of Dikwa.

Osinbajo’s spokesman Laolu Akande said the vice president, standing in for President Muhammadu Buhari who is on indefinite sick leave, called the attack “appalling.”

The meeting with commanders on Thursday saw Osinbajo issue “fresh directives ... to immediatel­y scale-up their efforts and activities in Borno state ... to maintain a strong, effective control of the situation,” he added.

The ambush near Magumeri killed 19 soldiers, 33 militia members and 17 civilians, sources told AFP, while three staff members from the University of Maiduguri were kidnapped.

Boko Haram published a video of the trio on Friday night in which they appealed to Osinbajo to meet their abductors’ demands.

Analysts have said the attack, apparently by Daesh-supported faction headed by Abu Mus’ab Al-Barnawi, was an indication of a newly emboldened Boko Haram.

Nigeria’s military has long maintained the group, which in 2014 held territory across northeast Nigeria, is all but defeated as a result of its sustained counter-insurgency.

Osinbajo acknowledg­ed that “pockets of terrorists have been launching attacks recently in Borno state.”

But he said the government was “on top of the situation (and) will define the end of these atrocities by both winning the war and winning the peace in the northeast.”

At least 20,000 people have been killed in insurgency since it began in 2009.

The exploratio­n team from the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n (NNPC) was hunting for crude in the Lake Chad basin as part of efforts to diversify supply and boost reserves.

Osinbajo said the ambush would not prevent the process.

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