Suspected Boko Haram
gunmen on horseback shot dead nearly 80 people in attacks on three villages in
Nigeria's restive northeast at the weekend, a vigilante and residents say. The
attacks were the latest bloodbath in the six-year-old insurgency by the
extremist group aimed at carving out an Islamic state in the volatile region. Babakura
Kolo, a vigilante fighting Boko Haram, said 68 people were killed in the attack
on Baanu village in Borno state late on Friday while residents said another 11
people were shot dead in two other villages on Saturday and Sunday.
"Reports
reached us of an attack on Baanu village late Friday where Boko Haram gunmen
riding on horses opened fire on the village. Sixty-eight people were killed in
the attack," Kolo told AFP.
He
said the gunmen stormed Baanu around 8.30 pm (1930 GMT), shooting sporadically.
Baanu
resident Aisami Ari who fled the attack to the state capital Maiduguri on
Saturday, also confirmed the attack and the death toll.
AFP report continues:
"The
attackers came on horses around 8.30 pm and began shooting sporadically. The
whole village was thrown into confusion and everybody fled. We returned after
they had gone and found out they had killed 68 people in the village," he
said.
"Most
of us left the village on Saturday for fear of a fresh attack," he added.
A
government official, who demanded anonymity, however put the death toll in
Baanu at 56.
Kolo
also said four people were killed in another attack by the Islamists in Karnuwa
village on Saturday.
"They
shot dead four people in the village, including the chief imam of the village,
his son and two neighbours," he said.
Local
resident Saleh Musa told AFP of a third attack on Hambagda on Sunday where they
killed seven villagers and injured five others.
- Attackers on horses -
"The
attackers arrived on horseback around 2:00 pm while people were praying in the
mosque. They went straight to the mosque and opened fire on worshippers,"
said Musa who later fled to the nearby town of Askira Uba.
"They
killed seven people, while five others were injured. I was late for the
afternoon prayers and I was at home preparing to go to the mosque and join in
the prayers when the attack happened."
Army
spokesman in Maiduguri, Colonel Tukur Gusau, and Borno government spokesman Isa
Umar Gusau said they could not immediately comment on the attacks.
Boko
Haram has stepped up its attacks since Nigeria's new President Muhammadu Buhari
was sworn in on May 29, vowing to crush the insurgency.
The
wave of violence since the inauguration has claimed more than 1,000 lives,
dealing a blow to a four-country offensive launched in February that had
chalked up a number of victories against the hardline Islamists.
The
extremists have carried out deadly ambushes across Nigeria's borders and in
recent weeks suicide bombers, many of them women, have staged several attacks
in Nigeria, Cameroon and Chad.
Boko
Haram, which is seeking to carve out a hardline Islamic state in northeast
Nigeria, has killed some 15,000 people and displaced 1.5 million since 2009.
An 8,700-strong
Multi-National Joint Task Force, drawing in Nigeria, Niger, Chad, Cameroon and
Benin, is expected to deploy against the insurgents soon.
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