According to BBC, the
militant group Boko Haram has seized a town and key multinational military base
in north-eastern Nigeria, officials and eyewitnesses say.
A senator in Borno state
said troops had abandoned the base in the town of Baga after it was attacked on
Saturday.
Residents of Baga, who fled
by boat to neighbouring Chad, said many people had been killed and the town set
ablaze.
Baga, scene of a Nigerian
army massacre in 2013, was the last town in the Borno North area under
government control.
It hosted the base of the
Multi-National Joint Task Force (MNJTF), made up of troops from Nigeria, Chad
and Niger.
Set up in 1998 to fight
trans-border crime in the Lake Chad region, the force more recently took on
Boko Haram.
Boko Haram attacks towns
and villages on an almost daily basis, abducting people including young boys
and girls, BBC Africa analyst Mary Harper reports.
The military, which
includes Western advisers and surveillance, seems incapable of dealing with the
problem, she adds.
Residents who fled to Chad
said they had woken to heavy gunfire as militants stormed Baga early on
Saturday, attacking from all directions.
They said they had decided
to flee when they saw the multi-national troops running away.
One unnamed resident of the
town described what had happened for the BBC:
When you see soldiers
running away into the town - what are you to do, other than to just run away as
well?”
"Yesterday at around
05:00 [04:00 GMT] we were woken up by heavy gunshots, and we couldn't identify
where the shots were coming from.
"They came through the
north, the west and from the southern part of the town because the eastern part
is only water. So, when we [went] towards the western part, we saw heavily
armed Boko Haram men coming towards us.
"The soldiers were
trying to repel the attack but that wasn't going to happen because a lot of the
soldiers were without their guns and some were running into the town. When you
see soldiers running away into the town - what are you to do, other than to
just run away as well?"
Maina Maaji Lawan, senator
for Borno North, told BBC World Service civilians had run "helter
skelter" - "some into the forest, some into the desert".
Communications with the
town were cut off and exact information about casualty numbers could not be
confirmed, he said.
"We are very
dispirited," the senator added.
Confirming that the
military had abandoned the base, he said people's frustration knew "no
bounds" over the apparent fact that the military had not fought back.
"There is definitely
something wrong that makes our military abandon their posts each time there is
an attack from Boko Haram," the senator said.
BBC News

Nigeria is gone, how soldiers be running? Who is to protect the resident?
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