Toronto Star

Nigeria frees 71 captives from Boko Haram

Survivors say they often went hungry and militants threatened to kill them

- MICHELLE FAUL AND HARUNA UMAR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

MAIDUGURI, NIGERIA— Nigerian soldiers rescued 71 people, almost all girls and women, in battles that killed many Boko Haram militants in villages near the northeaste­rn city of Maiduguri, the military said Thursday.

Some captives told The Associated Press they were in the clutches of the Islamic extremists for as long as a year.

“I was waiting for death . . . they often threatened to kill us,” said Yagana Kyari, a woman in her 20s who said she had been kidnapped from her village of Kawuri and was then taken to a militant camp in Walimberi, about 40 kilometres southeast of Maiduguri, the biggest city in the northeast and the birthplace of Boko Haram.

Kyari said they often went hungry because the extremists never provided enough food.

“Our gallants troops have rescued a total number of 59 civilians in two camps of the terrorist group,” army spokesman Col. I.T. Gusau said. “Many of the terrorists were killed in the course of the operations, but mop-up is still going on.”

The 59, all women and children ex- cept for five elderly men, were freed on Thursday, he said. Another 12 women and girls were rescued Wednesday from Kilakisa, 90 kilometres southwest of Maiduguri, he said.

The military has said hundreds of captives were freed in March when they declared they had seized back all towns held by Boko Haram, which last year had declared an Islamic caliphate in a large swath of the northeast.

But attacks have increased in recent weeks, with hundreds killed in suicide bombings and village assaults.

At least two women and girl suicide bombers this month were said to have come from the area where those freed this week were being held.

It is widely feared that Boko Haram has been turning its captives into weapons. Nigeria’s homegrown Islamic group drew internatio­nal outrage with the April 2014 kidnapping of nearly 300 schoolgirl­s from the remote northeaste­rn town of Chibok. Many of them escaped on their own, but 219 still are missing.

 ?? JOSSY OLA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Women and children rescued by Nigerian soldiers arrive at a military office in Maiduguri, Nigeria, Thursday after being held by extremists for a year.
JOSSY OLA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Women and children rescued by Nigerian soldiers arrive at a military office in Maiduguri, Nigeria, Thursday after being held by extremists for a year.

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