Nigeria's army said Friday it had killed 74 suspected Boko Haram
fighters in a raid in northeastern Borno state, as gunmen from the
Islamist group battled security forces in a neighbouring area.
The army, which is battling to crush a four-year Islamist uprising in
Nigeria, said it deployed bombs and ground troops to destroy insurgent
camps in Borno on Thursday.
Army spokesman Mohammed Dole said that "74 suspected militants" were
killed in the assault outside the Borno capital Maiduguri, where Boko
Haram was founded more than a decade ago.
The operation followed an assault Monday on Boko Haram camps in
another part of Borno, which the military said left 37 Islamists dead.
In a separate outbreak of violence, suspected Islamist fighters
stormed the city of Damaturu in coordinated raids on Thursday, burning
at least four police buildings, said a senior police officer who
requested anonymity.
The officer said there were casualties from the attack, which will be
seen as a setback in the campaign to end the insurgency.
The military had claimed an offensive launched more than four months
ago had put Boko Haram on the defensive and left it incapable of
attacking major urban centres like Damaturu.
Figures released earlier this year said the conflict had cost more
than 3,600 lives, including killings by the security forces. The
current toll is certainly much higher.
Damaturu is the capital of Yobe state, another area repeatedly
targeted by Boko Haram in an insurgency aimed at creating an Islamic
state in Nigeria's mainly Muslim north.
"They invaded the city in large numbers in vehicles and on foot from
different directions," the officer said.
They then opened fire "on police facilities with guns and explosives
and engaged soldiers and policemen in a fierce gunfire exchange that
continued deep into the night," he added.
The officer said the insurgents torched the area police command and at
least three other police facilities.
"There are indeed casualties, including a number of the insurgents,
but it is difficult to say how many they are", he said.
A resident, Haruna Sadi, said the attacks started around 5:00 pm (1600
GMT) and continued late into the night, forcing residents to stay
indoors.
"We didn't sleep last night due to fright and the deafening gun sounds
and explosions coming from all over the city," Sadi said.
"Everybody is still indoors because of a radio announcement of a
24-hour curfew by the military," he added.
Boko Haram, thought to be a fragmented group, with a murky leadership
structure, has attacked churches, mosques, the security forces and
schools across northern and central Nigeria, Africa's most populous
country and top oil producer.
The Islamists have killed hundreds of people across the northeast
since late June, including scores of students.
Last month, President Goodluck Jonathan ordered the country's top
military leaders to redouble their efforts following a spate of brutal
attacks on civilians.
Jonathan imposed a state of emergency across the northeast in mid-May
when the offensive was launched.
The phone network was switched off in the region when the emergency
measures were declared. Mobile service remains down in Borno, making
the military's accounts of fighting difficult to check with local
leaders and residents.
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