Business Day

Boko Haram kills 48 soldiers in northeast Nigeria

- Agency Staff Kano, Nigeria /AFP

Forty-eight soldiers were killed in a Boko Haram attack in remote northeast Nigeria, military sources said on Monday, in the latest strike that raises questions about the group’s apparent resurgence and troops’ ability to fight back.

Scores of jihadist fighters in trucks stormed the base on Thursday in Zari village in northern Borno state and briefly seized it after a fierce battle.

Boko Haram, which has been waging a deadly insurgency in northeast Nigeria since 2009, has intensifie­d attacks on “hard” military targets in recent months, underminin­g repeated claims by the military that they have the upper hand.

Troops have even protested that they are stretched to breaking point by constant security duties, and the analysts tracking the conflict say the attacks have become more sophistica­ted.

At least 30 Nigerian soldiers were initially said to have been killed in Thursday’s raid, claimed by a Boko Haram faction backed by Islamic State.

“The casualty toll now stands at 48 with the recovery of 17 more bodies of soldiers in surroundin­g bushes in Zari by search and rescue teams,” a military source told AFP.

“Search operations are still ongoing and more bodies are likely to be recovered.”

Another military source confirmed the new toll. “So far [the] bodies of 48 troops have been recovered. Yesterday rescue teams found 17 bodies of fallen soldiers,” he said, adding that they included two officers and 46 soldiers. “When the troops were overwhelme­d by the terrorists they withdrew in different directions.”

The militants were said to have taken weapons and military equipment before they were pushed out of the base by troops with aerial support. The sources said the extremists were pursued and bombarded by a fighter jet.

“The terrorists also suffered heavy casualty from the bombardmen­t,” one of the military officers said.

Zari is 30km from Damasak, on the border with Niger, which has seen an upsurge in Boko Haram activity.

The jihadists are thought to have attacked the base from the nearby Garunda village, where 17 troops were killed and 14 injured in an attack on another military base in August, the sources said.

On Friday the Nigerian military confirmed troops fought Boko Haram “insurgents … on [a] rampage to loot the community and extort money from villagers”. No death toll was given.

The intensifie­d armed campaign in recent weeks has claimed dozens of troops, providing the government with a headache as it looks to trumpet security achievemen­ts before elections in 2019. On July 14, militants overran a military base in Jilli village in neighbouri­ng Yobe state. Dozens of troops were said to have been killed, wounded or missing.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Hot spot: A file picture shows a military vehicle driving along the KondugaBam­a road in Bama, in Borno state, in 2016.
/Reuters Hot spot: A file picture shows a military vehicle driving along the KondugaBam­a road in Bama, in Borno state, in 2016.

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