A group of Boko Haram
gunmen arrived in Akwada, 10 kilometres from Chibok, late Saturday and torched
homes after looting food supplies.
Boko Haram jihadists killed
two soldiers and razed a village adjoining the northeast Nigerian town of
Chibok where the group kidnapped more than 200 schoolgirls two years ago,
residents said Sunday.
The Nigerian army meanwhile said it had retaken some villages
from the Islamist group in the Lake Chad region in operations on Friday and
Saturday and “rescued” 85 people, including women and children. It also claimed
nearly 40 Islamists were killed in other operations.
The attack came just hours
after the army said it had rescued one of the missing Chibok schoolgirls with
her 10-month-old baby near the Cameroon border. “Boko Haram gunmen attacked the
village around 7:30 pm. They fired indiscriminately and hurled explosives,”
resident Bitrus John told AFP.
“They killed two soldiers
and injured another one in gunfight,” he said. Troops patrolling the area
engaged the Islamists in a shootout, allowing residents to flee the village
unhurt, said John. Soldiers had deployed in the village following incessant
attacks in the area in recent months. “The village has been entirely burnt,
there is nothing left apart from burnt rubble of our mud houses,” said Bulus
Samson.
The attack underscores the
continued threat of Boko Haram in Nigeria’s volatile northeast, where the
military is battling for control despite making gains against the insurgents
over the past year. It came two weeks after similar raids on two nearby villages
where the Islamists looted and burnt homes.
The Nigerian army said on
Sunday it had rescued 85 people held by Boko Haram in villages around Lake
Chad. Army spokesman Sani Usman said in a statement that five insurgents and a
soldier were killed and that weapons had also been recovered. Usman said 37
Boko Haram fighters were killed in another operation in four villages in the
south of Borno state, the epicentre of the Islamist uprising.
He said a local vigilante
died and five soldiers were wounded during the operation. Boko Haram’s
seven-year insurgency in Nigeria’s predominantly-Muslim north has claimed at
least 20,000 lives and made more than 2.6 million homeless. Nigerian troops
with the help of neighbouring countries have recaptured swathes of territory
from Boko Haram since early 2015, but the extremists have carried out sporadic
attacks on remote villages in the restive region.
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