According to Vanguard, two suicide attacks in
north-east Nigeria killed at least 38 people Tuesday, less than six weeks from
elections, as the leader of Boko Haram vowed to disrupt the vote.
The Islamist insurgency has
already forced a delay in the polls, initially scheduled for February 14, and
officials had voiced hope that a regional military offensive could contain the
bloodshed before the new election day March 28.
But the latest wave of
attacks blamed on the rebels underscored the challenge facing Nigeria and its
neighbours — Cameroon, Chad and Niger — despite claims of successes in the
joint operation launched this month.
“This election will not be
held even if we are dead,” Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau said in a new
video, in what appeared to the first from the group released on Twitter.
Speaking before Shekau’s
threat, Niger’s President Mahamadou Issoufou vowed that his country would
herald the end for the rebels, whose six-year insurgency has killed more than
13,000 people.
“Niger will be the death of
Boko Haram,” he told a cheering crowd after a protest against the insurgents in
the capital Niamey.
But Boko Haram has proved
resilient an experts question whether the group can be overpowered in the
short-term.
In Nigeria’s Borno state,
three assailants in a motorised rickshaw detonated explosives at a checkpoint
at Yamarkumi village, near the town of Biu, at about 1:00 pm (1200 GMT).
The suicide attack killed
36 people and injured 20, a source at the Biu General Hospital told AFP,
requesting anonymity.
“Most of the victims were
child vendors and beggars that usually crowd the checkpoint,” the source added.
Boko Haram has repeatedly
tried to seize Biu, 180 kilometres (110 miles) from the state capital
Maiduguri, but has been repelled by troops and local vigilantes.
Some four hours later, in
Potiskum, the economic capital of neighbouring Yobe state, a bomber blew
himself up inside Al-Amir restaurant, a popular chain in northern Nigeria.
The restaurant manager and
a steward were killed, while 13 staff and customers were seriously injured, a
police officer and nurse the Potiskum General Hospital said.
Meanwhile, the Chadian army
said its troops had engaged in fierce combat with Boko Haram militants near the
town of Dikwa, some 90 kilometres from Maiduguri.
Two Chadian soldiers and
“several” militants were killed in the clashes,” a Chadian military source said
on condition of anonymity.
In the video, Shekau
repeated threats against Chadian President Idriss Deby and Niger’s leaders,
vowing that his fighters would outlast the multi-national offensive.
He also said the insurgents
freed their brothers-in-arms during a weekend raid in the Nigerian city of
Gombe, rejecting a military claim that the attack was repelled.

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