Boko Haram fighters attacked a military base and two surrounding
villages near the flashpoint Nigerian city of Maiduguri overnight,
killing at least 18 people and wounding 84, officials said Monday.
It
was one of the most brazen attacks in recent months and was a precursor
to a planned strike on Maiduguri, the capital of Borno State and the
birthplace of the hardline Islamist group.
Boko Haram
fighters attacked the base in the Cashew Plantation area on the
outskirts of the city with suicide bombers, mortars and guns, leading to
a prolonged battle, a senior military officer in Maiduguri said.
"Eighteen
Boko Haram terrorists on foot attacked the military base while seven
suicide bombers targeted residents of nearby Bale Shuwar and Alikaranti
villages at 8:50pm (1950 GMT)," the officer, who asked not to be
identified because he was not authorised to speak about the incident,
said.
"The terrorists fired mortars at troops," the officer said.
"So
far we have recovered 18 dead bodies from the two villages," Benlo
Dambatto, an official from the State Emergency Management Agency, told
AFP.
"The victims were killed while trying to escape the fight between the insurgents and the military," Dambatto said.
Casualties
It was not immediately clear if the casualties involved only civilians or included the jihadists and soldiers as well.
The
attackers were trying to infiltrate the city, Ba'Kura Abba Ali, a
militia leader in the area helping soldiers in fighting Boko Haram,
said.
The assailants climbed up a moat dug round the
city to stave off Boko Haram suicide and gun attacks, and attacked
troops, Ali said.
Maiduguri residents reported hearing at least five explosions and sounds of gunfire coming from the Cashew Plantation area.
"Huge
blasts and sounds of gunshots were heard all over the city last night
and they continued for more than an hour," one resident, Ibrahim Gremah,
said.
On Friday, four teenage girl suicide bombers
killed two people in multiple attacks in Zawuya settlement on the
outskirts of Maiduguri in the first assault since the government
announced it was in ceasefire talks with Boko Haram.
The
Islamic State-affiliated faction reportedly in talks with the
government is led by Abu Mus'ab al-Barnawi and is known for attacks on
military targets, while another faction led by Abubakar Shekau is
notorious for suicide bombings killing civilians.
Ceasefire agreement
The attacks highlight the challenge the government faces in striking a ceasefire agreement with the factionalised Boko Haram.
Late
last month, when more than 100 schoolgirls were returned to Dapchi
after being kidnapped by the jihadist group, Nigerian President
Muhammadu Buhari said his government was offering amnesty to "repentant"
jihadists.
But senior security officials cautioned
that reaching any agreement with the group will be difficult, as it is
split into competing factions with different goals.
Boko
Haram's nearly nine-year fight to establish a hardline Islamic state in
northeast Nigeria has claimed at least 20,000 lives and displaced more
than two million people.
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