Three soldiers and 123 Boko Haram militants were killed when the
Islamist group attacked a Chadian army contingent in northern Cameroon,
the Chadian military said on Friday.
Twelve soldiers
were wounded in the attacks staged by the Islamists on Thursday and
Friday near the border town of Fotokol, according to a military
statement read out on national television.
Chad sent a
convoy of troops and military vehicles into neighbouring Cameroon on
January 17 to deal with the growing threat Boko Haram poses in the
region.
"The enemy was repelled by our defensive
forces," the general staff's statement said, adding that the troops had
"routed" the Islamists in the second attack.
The soldiers were killed by improvised explosive devices, the statement said.
A
senior Cameroonian security source said the Chadian troops were
deployed to the town, which sits opposite a Nigerian town under Boko
Haram control and is also close to the border with Chad, on Wednesday.
Boko
Haram frequently stages attacks on Fotokol from their base in the
Nigerian town of Gamboru, which is just 500 metres (yards) away.
BROAD COALITION
Chad
has called on countries in the region to form a broad coalition in the
fight against the Islamist group. The country has already deployed its
army along its borders as well as sending the additional contingent to
Cameroon.
Chad's president Idriss Deby has also
expressed intentions of taking back the strategic Nigerian town of Baga
from Boko Haram, situated on Lake Chad.
The African
Union called on Friday for a regional five-nation force of 7,500 troops
to defeat the "horrendous" rise of Boko Haram.
"Terrorism,
in particular the brutality of Boko Haram against our people, (is) a
threat to our collective safety, security and development. This has now
spread to the region beyond. Nigeria and requires a collective,
effective and decisive response," AU commission chair Nkosazana
Dlamini-Zuma said in a speech opening the summit.
UN
Secretary General Ban Ki-moon told African leaders that Boko Haram was
"a clear danger to national, regional and international peace and
security".
The group's uprising has become a regional crisis, with the four directly affected countries — Cameroon, Chad, Niger and Nigeria — agreeing along with Benin to boost cooperation to contain the threat and to form a Multinational Joint Task Force.
More than 13,000 people have been killed and more than one million made homeless by Boko Haram violence since 2009.
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