Nigerian troops killed scores of Muslim extremists and rescued about 20 women and children from captivity on Saturday, even as reports came in of Boko Haram fighters slitting villagers’ throats and chopping them to death.
The details bolster reports that the insurgents are running out of ammunition and resorting to hit-and-run assaults in the face of a Nigerian offensive against their last stronghold, a northeastern forest.
“Despite continuous encounters with large numbers of land mines that still litter the Sambisa Forest, troops have forged ahead with the ongoing offensive operations as scores of the terrorists died in the assault on their bases on Friday,” said a statement from Nigerian Ministry of Defence spokesman Major General Chris Olukolade on Saturday night.
Four Boko Haram camps were destroyed in the assault in which one government soldier was killed and 10 wounded by land mines, he said.
Many insurgent weapons, including armored cars, were destroyed, he added.
Meanwhile, farmer Kwada Abawu said he saw at least 10 people slaughtered by Boko Haram fighters before he fled his northeastern village of Kwamda-Kobla on Friday.
No shots were fired, according to Abawu and local government chairman Maina Ularamu. He said some victims were axed to death, while others had their heads cut off.
He said civilian self-defense fighters were pursuing the attackers.
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said he “is deeply troubled by the continuing indiscriminate and horrific attacks by Boko Haram against civilian populations in Cameroon, Chad, Niger and Nigeria.”
A statement released on Friday said Ban regretted the continuing “wanton destruction and killing of civilians,” despite recent gains by the Nigerian military.
The tide is thought to have turned against Boko Haram, which earlier had seized scores of towns and villages and declared a Muslim caliphate across a portion of northeast Nigeria in an fundamentalist uprising that killed at least 10,000 people last year.
The turning point came when Nigeria acquired new weapons and helicopter gunships for its demoralized troops, and soldiers from neighboring Chad, Niger and Cameroon joined the battle this year as Boko Haram attacks spilled over Nigeria’s borders.
Nigeria’s military in March said that it had driven Boko Haram from all strongholds except camps in the Sambisa Forest.
The forest offensive has freed about 700 women, girls and children held captive by the extremists, officials said.
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