Boko Haram fakes funeral, kills 11 in Maiduguri
MAIDUGURI – (AFP) - Boko Haram Islamists have stormed a neighbourhood
in the restive city of Maiduguri, killing at least 11 people with
weapons hidden in a coffin, local residents said Monday.
There were conflicting reports as to the number of people who lost their lives in the attack that began late Friday.
Information has been slow to emerge in the region because the mobile
phone network has been shut down by the military amid an offensive aimed
at crushing the Islamists.
Military spokesman Lieutenant
Colonel Sagir Musa confirmed that gunmen launched attacks on Friday
evening in the neighbourhoods of Hausari, Fizzan and Gwange.
Hausari resident Moh’d Aji said 10 attackers came in a pick-up truck, with a coffin visible in the exposed flat-bed rear.
“Everybody thought they were going for burial until they alighted from
their vehicle and started bringing out their guns,” said Aji.
“They just opened fire into different directions.”
He said 11 bodies were recovered after the attack, including one child.
Another resident, Habibu Malud, said 13 people were killed.
The military spokesman said troops responded on Saturday morning, raiding insurgent “hideouts” in the targeted neighbourhoods.
“Five of the suspects died in a shootout as they attempted to flee,” Musa said.
It was not clear if the five dead reported by Musa were among the corpses spotted by residents.
Boko Haram fighters are known to blend in with the local population,
and distinguishing between insurgent deaths and civilian casualties is
typically difficult.
The group has said it is fighting to create an Islamic state in Nigeria’s mainly Muslim north.
The insurgency has left 3,600 people dead since 2009, including killings by the security services.
The military launched a sweeping offensive against Boko Haram on May 15
and has claimed successes, describing the Islamists as being in
“disarray.”
But those claims have been impossible to verify and
there are concerns that the insurgents may regroup once the military
pressure fades.
There has been a lull in the number of reported
attacks since the offensive was launched, but very little information
has emerged from the northeast with the phone networks down.
The group has repeatedly carried out attacks in Maiduguri, their traditional base.
They were thought to have relocated to sparsely populated areas in
Nigeria’s semi-desert northeast amid a crackdown in Maiduguri.
The ongoing offensive has been most heavily concentrated in these remote areas, particularly along the border with Cameroon.
Source:Vanguard Newspaper
No comments:
Post a Comment