Insecurity: 15 soldiers, 50 ‘terrorists’ killed after clashes in Borno

by Akintomiwa Agbaje

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The terrorist attack that occurred at the Mohammed Kur barracks in a restive northeastern town in Borno state last week Friday has left no fewer than 15 soldiers dead.

This follows the large scale manhunt mobilised by the Nigerian troops for the radical Islamists conclusively leaving 50 Boko haram members dead and more than 20 vehicles destroyed.

Spokesman for the Military in the state Maj. General Chris Olukolade confirmed the figures.

PMNews reports:

He said the military lost 15 soldiers, mostly from the attack, while some died during the pursuit around the border with Cameroon.

Boko Haram gunmen stormed the Mohammed Kur Barracks in Bama, Borno state early Friday, spraying it with bullets before torching the compound.

“Although a good number of the insurgents escaped with bullet wounds while some have been arrested, over 50 of them died in the course of exchange of fire with ground troops in the ongoing operations to apprehend fleeing terrorists,” Major-General Chris Olukolade said in a statement. 

“A total of five civilians also died during the attack,” he said.

Olukolade said the military destroyed over 20 vehicles conveying fleeing Boko Haram fighters.

“The vehicles were the ones used during the attack on the barracks and were sited through air surveillance as the terrorists were making efforts to cross the borders back to their haven in Cameroun,” he said.

He said the military would continue to search for more insurgents who might be on the run.

Several Bama residents said the insurgents abducted several of the soldiers’ wives and children during Friday’s attack. They said the attackers fled to the nearby village of Abbaram, prompting the military to pursue them.

Olukolade said the families affected by the attacks had been relocated to other military locations.

In November, Human Rights Watch reported that Boko Haram has increasingly used kidnappings as a tactic, abducting scores of women and children this year.

The Bama attack was the second major Islamist assault on the army this month, casting further doubt on official claims that the rebels have been weakened by a seven-month-old military offensive in the northeast.

The military offensive, launched when the state of emergency was declared in May, has partly succeeded in driving the Islamists out of major urban centres, but attacks have continued in remote communities.

Boko Haram, declared a terrorist organisation by the United States last month, is fighting to create in Islamic state in Nigeria’s mainly Muslim north. The conflict has killed thousands since 2009.

Nigeria has extended the emergency measures through to May in a bid to permanently crush the insurgency.

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