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Chadian troops kill 13 Boko Haram insurgents

By EDITOR
11 February 2015   |   8:48 pm
THE Chadian soldiers Wednesday said they killed 13 fighters from Islamist militant group, Boko Haram, in a battle in the Nigerian town of Gambaru, the army said in a statement, adding that one Chadian soldier was killed.   “Chad’s army is in Gambaru as part of a regional offensive, including Niger and Cameroun, against Boko…

BOKO-HARAM-OK

THE Chadian soldiers Wednesday said they killed 13 fighters from Islamist militant group, Boko Haram, in a battle in the Nigerian town of Gambaru, the army said in a statement, adding that one Chadian soldier was killed.

  “Chad’s army is in Gambaru as part of a regional offensive, including Niger and Cameroun, against Boko Haram, whose militants have staged cross-border raids in addition to attacks in Nigeria as part of a campaign to establish a caliphate.

  “Much of the recent fightings have taken place near Lake Chad, which borders Nigeria, Chad, Cameroun and Niger, and in northern Cameroun itself.

  “Hundreds of people have been killed in the incursions as well as in Nigeria, according to military sources from the different countries. There is no independent verification of the casualty toll.

  “We knew they were going to attack us. We were waiting. The battle didn’t last long. They fled,” one military source told Reuters.

   Also, the army said 11 Chadian soldiers were wounded, three out of 14 Boko Haram vehicles were destroyed, and one was seized.

  “Boko Haram attacked the town of N’Guigmi on Niger’s border with Nigeria late on Tuesday with mortars and machine guns, but the attack failed.

  “The situation is precarious because Boko Haram could come back to assault us at any moment,” a military source said Wednesday, adding that schools in the town are closed.

  “Militant fighters were harassing Niger’s army with mortars, but the army was able to locate the source of the firing and neutralise the threat.

  “Authorities in Diffa searched house-to-house for Boko Haram suspects and arrested four men who arrived on a truck bound for Niger’s second largest city, Zinder.

  “Schools in the town were closed and civil servants had left their posts to take their families to more secure towns elsewhere, said a police officer in the town, the source said.

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