Nigeria’s military raided an Islamic insurgent camp and launched air and ground attacks over two days, killing about 50 sect members, a military official said on Friday.
This came as Nigerians mourned the death of nine people who died after Boko Haram staged a highway attack on Thursday at Bulabulin-Ngabura village, 50km north of Maiduguri, the birthplace of the Boko Haram insurgency.
The military’s newly formed 7th division, established to quell the insurgency in the northeast, participated in the raid, spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Sagir Musa said in Maiduguri. The attack on the camp also involved a military gunship as back up, he said. Military helicopters have been seen hovering in the skies near Maiduguri recently.
Musa said the counterattack took place near Bulabulin-Ngaura and in Gajiram village, where 15 people were killed by suspected Boko Haram members who raided a local market on Wednesday.
“Troops pursued the terrorists to their camps and destroyed the camps with air support,” he said.
Boko Haram members who staged the highway attack early on Thursday also kidnapped a family of five who were traveling to their country home in Biu for the weekend, residents in Bulabulin-Ngabura villages said.
Cab driver Musa Lado told reporters that dozens of insurgents staged the attack, which killed a Borno state government adviser.
“We could not move along the highway for several hours because of the attack. By the time we were told the road was safe to continue our journey, we saw corpses of nine persons, including that of an adviser in the Borno state government,” another cab driver said.
He spoke on condition of anonymity out of fear for his safety.
The driver also said a man, his wife and three children were kidnapped from their car along the highway, and he helped get the vehicle to Biu.
Since 2010, more than 1,700 people have been killed in attacks by Boko Haram, whose name means “Western education is forbidden.”
There has been a rash of attacks by suspected sect members in northeast Nigeria recently, after young vigilantes formed the Civilian Joint Task Force (CJTF) in June as a backlash against Boko Haram. The task force has taken over the search for the insurgents in many towns in the north and most Boko Haram members have since relocated to the surrounding bushes. The vigilante force claims credit for thousands of arrests in Maiduguri and many killings.
Many residents welcome the vigilantes and credit them for some initial relative peace. Others find their existence troubling and worry that they may carry out human rights abuses.
Nigeria’s Chief of Army Staff Lieutenant General Azubuike Ihejerika on Friday commended the CJTF for helping the government catch Islamic sect members in northeast Borno state.
“I wish to commend the youth volunteers for their support in fighting the insurgency,” Ihejerika said in the first endorsement of the group by a high-ranking military officer.
Ihejerika was in Maiduguri to oversee the deployment of troops and equipment for the newly established 7th Division of the Nigerian army. The new division, once fully established, would bring an end to the mandate for the CJTF, which has had military backing when it goes out on missions.
The vigilante group members have also become targets. On Aug. 30, suspected Islamic sect members ambushed and killed at least 24 members of the CJTF who were on a mission to find and fight the sect near Monguno town, 160km from the city of Maiduguri. Those who returned from the attack said 36 other vigilantes were missing.
Earlier that week, two attacks killed at least 20 members of the CJTF in Damasak, where six members were shot while sleeping, and in Barma, where attackers disguised in military uniforms slit the throats of young men.
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