Gamboru in Borno been attacked by Boko Haram RFI / Madjiasra Nako.
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About 40 people have been killed by suspected
Boko Haram militants who torched houses and shot people as they fled in two
villages in northeast Nigeria's Borno state, witnesses told Reuters on
Wednesday.
The
attackers, who arrived on motorcycles and vehicles mounted with guns, shot
residents and looted shops in the villages of Debiro Biu and Debiro Hawul late
on Monday night and into Tuesday morning, the witnesses said.
Local
police confirmed the attacks took place but declined to comment further.
Reuters report continues:
Details of
the attack did not emerge for several hours due to poor telecommunications
networks in the remote villages in northeast Nigeria, a region in which Boko
Haram has killed thousands in a six-year bid to set up an Islamic state.
"They
were shooting sporadically and then they started looting shops and setting
places ablaze," said witness Hussaini Adamu, who fled with other villagers
to hide in bushes after fleeing Debiro Biu.
More than
100 people have been killed in northeast Nigeria in the past few weeks in a
spate of bombings, mostly in Maiduguri, the capital of Borno state.
Muhammadu
Buhari, the new president of Africa's most populous nation and biggest economy,
made Maiduguri the command centre for the military campaign against Boko Haram
after being inaugurated last month.
Buhari has
held talks with counterparts in neighbouring countries to set up a joint force
to tackle the insurgents.
Boko Haram controlled
territory the size of Belgium in the northeast at the start of the year but has
been pushed out of most of it by the Nigerian army, backed by troops from Chad,
Niger and Cameroon.
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