Villagers
described how dozens of gunmen on motorbikes stormed Tadagara and Dunbulwa
villages, 170 kilometres (100 miles) from Yobe state capital Damaturu, from
Wednesday night through to the following morning.
Boko Haram
Islamists shot dead at least nine people and set homes on fire in a raid on two
villages in conflict-hit northeastern Nigeria, fleeing residents told AFP on
Thursday.
All nine
victims were gunned down with assault rifles as the jihadis attacked Tadagara
around 10:30 pm (2130 GMT), looting thatch-roofed mud homes and shops before
setting them ablaze, according to witnesses.
“Boko Haram
gunmen came on motorcycles and opened fire on the village after we had retired
for the night and killed nine residents,” Tadagara villager Shuaibu Nuhu told
AFP.
“We fled into
the bush from where we saw fire erupting from our homes as the gunmen set them
alight after looting them.”
Residents
said the Islamists stayed until dawn, sheltering from heavy rain before moving
to nearby Dunbulwa village.
The
inhabitants there had been warned of the danger by escaped Tadagara residents
however and had fled by the time the gunmen arrived.
“We luckily
left the village as soon as we heard Boko Haram gunmen were on the attack in
Tadagara which was why they found the village empty,” said Dunbulwa resident
Sani Mai-Masara.
“They carted
away food and jerry cans of fuel. They then set fire to our homes.”
The attacks
forced hundreds of villagers to flee to the town of Potiskum, 70 kilometres
away, according to residents there.
Boko Haram’s
bloody insurgency in Nigeria has left more than 15,000 people dead since 2009
and has increasingly spread across the country’s borders, with Chad and
Cameroon suffering deadly suicide bombings in recent months.
The extremist
group, whose name roughly translates as “Western education is forbidden”, has
carried on its campaign of attacks on security forces, suicide bombings and
bloody raids on villages across Nigeria’s north and eastern borders despite a
major regional military campaign against them.
The latest
violence in the region comes just over two months after President Muhammadu
Buhari took office vowing to crush the Islamist jihadists, now affiliated with
the Islamic State group.
Boko Haram
fighters have been using the islets in Lake Chad as a rear base after being
routed from their traditional strongholds in Nigeria by a four-country military
offensive against them.
The Chadian
army has launched a “major operation” to flush out Boko Haram jihadists from
the vast lake, however, sparking violent clashes between soldiers and the
group.
The attacks
in Yobe came a day after Boko Haram fighters shot dead nine fishermen near the
town of Baga by Lake Chad in neighbouring Borno State.
A week
earlier the Islamists slit the throats of 10 fishermen in an attack on three
other nearby villages.
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