Nigerian troops retake border town from Boko Haram fighters
MAIDUGURI, NIGERIA— Nigerian troops retook a major border town and killed scores of Boko Haram fighters Saturday, Nigeria’s military said, although witnesses also reported the Islamic extremists killed scores in attacks on other villages.
Defence Ministry spokesman Maj. Gen. Chris Olukolade said troops seized back the garrison town of Baga, on Lake Chad and the border with Cameroon, after a fighter jet bombarded the area and soldiers advanced on booby-trapped roads by dismantling about 1,500 landmines.
“Many of the terrorists died, while an unknown but substantial number of them fled with various degrees of injury,” Olukolade said.
Many insurgents drowned in trying to escape, as soldiers stormed into Baga early Friday, he added.
The victory, which The Associated Press was unable to verify independently, comes amid a major multinational push to halt the spreading Islamic uprising by Nigeria’s homegrown extremist group, which has been attacking neighbouring Chad, Cameroon and Niger.
In the latest Boko Haram violence, a military official said Saturday that seven soldiers were killed in an overnight attack on the island of Karamga in Lake Chad. Col. Salaou Barmou said 14 Boko Haram assailants were also killed in the fighting Friday night.
In a major turnaround after months of gains by Boko Haram, military from Nigeria and Chad have reported retaking at least a dozen towns in recent weeks that had been in extremist hands for months.
Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau this week warned he will disrupt March 28 presidential elections that are shaping up to be the most closely contested vote in the history of Africa’s most-populous nation and its biggest oil producer. Boko Haram wants to install an Islamic caliphate and says democracy is a corrupt Western concept.
Earlier this week, residents and local officials said suspected Boko Haram fighters killed at least 34 and injured several others in attacks on villages near Konduga and Chibok, the town where in April last year, Boko Haram kidnapped nearly 300 schoolgirls in northeastern Borno state. Dozens escaped independently but 219 are still missing.
The gunmen attacked the Tamsu-Shehuri village on Wednesday night, where they killed more than a dozen people, said a resident.
“Many of them came riding on (motor) bikes and Hilux vans, and all of them were armed with rifles,” said Aisami Bashir, a member of a local civilian protection militia. “They opened fire on the village as residents began to flee. Many aged persons who could not run were caught and killed. They broke into homes and looted their belongings, especially their food items.”
Twenty-one people were killed in the coordinated attacks, said local government official Suleiman Ali.
In neighbouring Adamawa state, the insurgents attacked three villages on the outskirts of the Sambisa Forest and killed at least 40 people on Thursday and Friday, survivors said.
“They ransacked our villages for almost two days,” said chief hunter Baba Jibrin.
International concern has increased with the rising number of fatalities, estimated at about 10,000 in the past year, along with about 1.5 million people driven from their homes, according to the U.S. Council on Foreign Relations.