At least a dozen civilians and a Chadian soldier were killed in two
suicide attacks by suspected Boko Haram militants in the northern Cameroon town
of Fotokol late on Sunday, a senior Cameroonian military officer said. The first explosion went off inside a bar near a
Cameroon special forces (BIR) camp just after sundown as many were breaking the
Ramadan fast, the officer said, asking not to be named.
"The second explosion followed as soldiers
approached the bar," he said.
Reuters report continues:
Islamist group Boko Haram, which launched an insurgency six years ago to carve out an emirate in northeast Nigeria, has also stepped up attacks in neighbouring Chad, Cameroon and Niger in recent months.
Islamist group Boko Haram, which launched an insurgency six years ago to carve out an emirate in northeast Nigeria, has also stepped up attacks in neighbouring Chad, Cameroon and Niger in recent months.
The
group is suspected of launching a similar attack in Chad's capital, about 60 km
(37 miles) east of Fotokol, on Saturday. A man dressed in a woman's burqa blew
himself up in the main market killing 15 people.
Chad Declares Head Veil Crackdown
After Bombing By Disguised Boko Haram Attacker
Reuters / Amr Abdallah Dalsh
|
RT.com reports Chadian police said they will ramp up
the enforcement of last month's ban on head-to-toe hijabs after a suicide
bomber dressed as a woman killed 15 people at a market in the capital
N'Djamena.
The bomber believed to be a Boko Haram fighter
detonated his explosives belt after being stopped for a security check at the
entrance to the market. Nine of the victims of the blast were women traders. It
also injured some 80 people and provoked panic in the city.
"This attack just confirms that a ban on the
full-face veil was justified," national police spokesman Paul Manga
said as cited by AFP. He added that "it now must be respected more
than ever by the entire population".
Chad, a leading partner in a regional coalition
fighting against the Boko Haram insurgency, suffered its first serious blow
from the terrorists on June 15, when two coordinated bombings rocked N'Djamena,
killing 33 people and injuring over 100.
Among the security measures announced in response, the
country banned the hijab covering the face, saying it may disguise terrorists.
The ban will now be enforced more rigorously, with anyone wearing a veil
subjected to arrest on sight, Manga warned on Sunday.
The June ban came as Muslims, who comprise roughly 53
percent of the population, were celebrating the holy month of Ramadan and was a
shock to some of them.
"It isn't people in burqas who commit attacks and
this dress has become customary for many Chadians,"Hassan Barka, a
mechanic, told AFP at the time. "It is difficult to implement this
decision. Maybe time is needed to spread awareness."
The influential Superior Council of Islamic Affairs criticized
the decision, saying it goes against the principles of Islam.
The outcry however was mild, as Chad's Muslims are
predominantly moderate Sufis and see face-covering burqas and niqabs as
cultural rather than religious clothing.
Some doubted the efficiency of the ban in the long
run.
"Purely and simply banning an association is no
solution," said the secretary general of King Faisal University in
N'Djamena, Abakar Walar Modou. "You can't halt an ideology that way, it
causes frustration."
Boko Haram is a radical Islamist movement that has
plagued Nigeria since 2009. The violence has claimed at least 15,000 lives, as
the militants have raided villages and towns and sent suicide bombers to
Christian churches and other public sites.
Nigeria's neighbours Niger, Chad, Cameroon and Benin
as well as France are taking part in a joint effort to eradicate Boko Haram.
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