Business Day

Boko suspected in church attack

- LANRE OLA Maiduguri, Nigeria

SUSPECTED Boko Haram Islamists attacked churches yesterday near Chibok, the Nigerian town where more than 200 teenage girls were kidnapped, and dozens are feared dead.

SUSPECTED Boko Haram Islamists attacked a series of churches yesterday near Chibok, the northeast Nigeria town where more than 200 teenage girls were kidnapped in April, with dozens feared dead, witnesses said.

Residents said the gunmen riding on motorcycle­s opened fire on worshipper­s and pursued them as they tried to flee into the surroundin­g bush. The attackers hurled explosives into churches as services were ongoing and torched several buildings, witnessed further reported.

The targeted villages have been identified as Kwada, Ngurojina, Karagau and Kautikari, all in Borno state, the stronghold of the Islamist group that has killed thousands during a five-year extremist uprising.

“The attackers went to churches with bombs and guns,” said a Chibok resident, Timothy James, by phone, explaining that the villages were within 10km of Chibok. “From what I gathered, dozens of worshipper­s, including men, women and children were killed.” His informatio­n was gleaned from people who fled the affected area and by phone calls.

Enoch Mark, an outspoken Chibok leader since the April 14 kidnapping­s, gave a similar account, saying the raid was ongoing: “Presently, as we are talking now, we are under attack.”

“I was told the attackers burnt at least three churches to the ground,” he added. He said the community would be able to get a more accurate death toll once the violence abated, but feared the dead numbered in the dozens and that gunmen were firing on people as they ran into the surroundin­g bushlands.

Boko Haram, which has said it wants to create a strict Islamic state in Nigeria’s mainly Muslim north, has attacked churches throughout its insurgency. According to Mr Mark, the military did not responded to distress calls after the attack began. “They just went and got a hiding place in the bush,” he told AFP.

While it was not immediatel­y possible to verify the charge, if true, it would likely raise further questions about the military effort in the northeast. Following the April abduction of 276 girls by Boko Haram from a secondary school in Chibok, parents and local leaders accused the military of doing almost nothing to secure the release of the hostages. Fiftyseven of the girls escaped within days of the night-time raid on the school and local officials have said that 219 are still being held.

Internatio­nal outrage has spread since the kidnapping­s and Nigeria has promised to better secure in the northeast, which has been under a state of emergency since May of last year. A local government official in Chibok, who confirmed the attack and requested anonymity, said Nigeria needed to step up its fight against Boko Haram, as residents in the northeast were being left to die with little protection. “The federal government must do the right thing by taking the fight to the terrorists,” he said.

Nigeria has accepted help from major world powers including the US, France and UK to rescue the hostage schoolgirl­s and improve its counter-insurgency tactics.

Some analysts had hoped that increased co-operation with Western militaries including intelligen­ce sharing could help Nigeria cut down on Boko Haram attacks.

But so far the gains have been limited. “It is beyond our comprehens­ion that the terrorists are coming out in daylight to kill people,” with no resistance from troops, the Chibok government official said.

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