2015-02-06

Premium Times

Boko Haram attacks military base in Niger

February 6, 2015Premium Times


Boko Haram

Islamist militant group Boko Haram, attacked a military base in eastern Niger, expanding its reign of terror across the region, witnesses said on Friday.

It is the first time the Nigeria-based insurgents launched an assault in Niger, after infiltrating northern Cameroon for the past few months, killing dozens of people.

Boko Haram clashed with soldiers in Bosso, a town that borders Nigeria.

However, a causality figure could not be confirmed.

The attack came a day after Boko Haram killed 31 people in northern Cameroon, when it burnt three mosques in the town of Fotokol, also near the Nigerian border.

Insurgents on Wednesday killed 82 civilians in Fotokol, as well as six Cameroonians and 13 Chadian soldiers.

Boko Haram descended on Fotokol in apparent retaliation for the deaths of over 200 of their members killed this week by Chadian and Nigerian troops.

Nigerian and Chadian aircraft have been bombing Boko Haram hideouts since Monday.

No fewer than 2,000 Chadian soldiers were stationed this week along the Nigeria-Cameroon border after the AU agreed on January 31 to send 7,500 troops to fight Boko Haram.

Boko Haram has killed over 13,000 people since 2009 in northern Nigeria under the pretext of trying to establish an Islamist state.

The insurgents control about 130 villages and towns in northern Nigeria, a territory the size of Belgium, and have sparked fears of regional instability.

(dpa/NAN)

BBC

Boko Haram launches first attack in Niger

Soldiers from Chad patrol the border of Nigeria and Cameroon to defend against Boko Haram

The Nigerian Islamist militant group Boko Haram has attacked a town in Niger for the first time, witnesses say.

The attack on the border town of Bosso was the group’s second on a neighbouring country in as many days.

Its militants reportedly killed at least 70 people in an attack on the town of Fotokol in Cameroon on Thursday.

The Boko Haram insurgency has left thousands dead and displaced more than a million over the past six years.

The militants control a large stretch of land in north-eastern Nigeria.

Islamists pushed back

Yacouba Soumana Gaoh, the governor of the Diffa region around Bosso, told the BBC that the Islamists had been successfully pushed back after clashing with Nigerian troops.

Mr Gaoh said the number of casualties was unknown but he believed no civilians were harmed during the fighting.

A BBC reporter said that the Boko Haram militants had attacked Bosso early in the morning with heavy weapons, causing residents to flee and or hide indoors.

One resident told Agence France-Presse news agency: “We can hear the sound of weapons all around the town, often very near our windows.

“There is the noise of heavy weapons and of light arms, making our houses shake.”

Bosso lies just across the border from Nigeria’s Borno state, one of the areas worst affected by Islamist violence.

Nigeria’s Boko Haram has attacked towns in neighbouring Cameroon and Niger in recent days

The town is home to thousands of Nigerian refugees who have fled Boko Haram.

The militant group, which has sworn allegiance to Islamic State and desires its own caliphate in Nigeria, has killed thousands and displaced millions in the country’s north-east.

It is now threatening Chad, Niger and Cameroon, prompting Chad to deploy 2,500 troops to border areas including Bosso.

Chad sent troops to Cameroon last month to join the offensive against Boko Haram, following widespread criticism of the Nigerian army’s failure to curb the insurgency.

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