Boko Haram Insurgents |
At least 25 people
have been killed by suspected Boko Haram militants on three communities in
Nigeria’s northeastern Borno state, military and police sources said. The raids took place
on Monday afternoon and Tuesday morning, Reuters reported. The main village
attacked was Dille along with two smaller communities in the Askira/Uba local
government area in the Borno state. The region is hit hardest by an Islamist
insurgency.
Meanwhile Vanguard
reports Cameroon will send about 2,000 military reinforcements to the north to
fight Boko Haram, the Nigerian jihadist movement behind bloody cross-border
raids and suicide bombings, state television said Tuesday.
“Almost 2,000 extra
soldiers will be deployed in the Extreme North region,” on the border with
northeastern Nigeria, according to the report on Cameroon Radio-Television,
which gave no timetable for the operation.
The reinforcements will
raise to 8,500 the number of troops deployed to take on the Boko Haram
insurgents, who have attacked villagers and towns inside Cameroon for two
years, massacring and abducting civilians.
In the past fortnight, an
unprecedented series of five suicide bombings by Boko Haram has claimed dozens
of lives, including 33 people killed by teenage girls in three attacks on the
market town of Maroua.
Since Sunday, seven
people were slain in village raids, three of whom were beheaded, according to
local security sources.
Cameroon has joined a
regional campaign alongside Chad, Niger and Nigeriaitself to battle Boko Haram,
which has killed at least 15,000 people since 2009 in the name of founding an
Islamic caliphate.
Nigerian President
Muhammadu Buhari will travel to Cameroon on Wednesday for talks with President
Paul Biya in a bid “to build a strong regional alliance to confront Boko
Haram,” Buhari’s spokesman Garba Shehu told AFP.
After more than seven
months of delay, the deployment of a long-awaited Multinational Joint Task
Force of 8,700 soldiers, police and civilian personnel has been announced for
the end of July.
Nigeria’s small western
neighbour, Benin, has been sitting in on high-level military talks and will be
a part of the task force, to be based in Chad’s capital N’Djamena.
The Chadian army is
engaged in a major military operation against Boko Haram forces that have
fallen back on the many islands of Lake Chad, a key location where the borders
of Cameroon, Chad, Niger and Nigeria converge.
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