“The United
States strongly condemns the recent attacks in north-eastern Nigeria inflicted
by Boko Haram,” State Department spokesman John Kirby said in a statement.
The United States vowed Sunday to support Nigeria after a series of deadly terror attacks blamed on Boko Haram, calling for those responsible to face justice.
The United States vowed Sunday to support Nigeria after a series of deadly terror attacks blamed on Boko Haram, calling for those responsible to face justice.
The Islamists
have launched a series of attacks on mosques, villages and markets in Borno
state in the past few days, claiming more than 200 lives.
On Sunday a
suicide bomber blew himself up inside a church in the restive north-eastern
city of Potiskum, killing five worshippers.
John Kirby
said,
“We will
continue to support Nigeria’s efforts to bring those responsible for these
attacks, as well as previous attacks, to justice,” he added in offering
condolences to the families of the victims. Boko Haram appear keen to prove
they are not a spent force despite a four-nation military offensive running them
out of several towns and villages they had controlled.
“As we have
said before, the people of northern Nigeria deserve to live free from violence
and from terror,” Kirby said. He noted that Washington is providing
counterterrorism aid to help Nigerian authorities fight the terror group. And
Kirby commended the “gains” of Nigeria’s military, as well as forces from
Cameroon, Chad and Niger, against Boko Haram.
A coalition
of the four countries — all of which border Lake Chad, a focal point of Boko
Haram unrest — launched military operations against the jihadists early this
year to try claw back some of the territory they had seized. “The United States
stands with the Nigerian people in their struggle against violent extremism,”
Kirby said.
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