At least 60 killed by suspected Islamists in Nigeria | Inquirer News

At least 60 killed by suspected Islamists in Nigeria

/ 11:14 AM April 14, 2014

Local people, some armed with swords gather around the bodies of suspected Islamic militants following an attack at the Giwa Military barracks in Maiduguri, Nigeria, Friday, March, 14. 2014, after the militants struck the northern city of Maiduguri Friday morning, attacking the main military barracks with gunfire and explosions. AP FILE PHOTO

KANO, Nigeria – Suspected Boko Haram Islamists on Sunday killed at least 60 people in Nigeria’s troubled north-eastern Borno state close to the border with Cameroon, a local official said.

“The attackers, who are no doubt Boko Haram insurgents, attacked Amchaka and nearby villages this morning, hurling IEDs (improvised explosive devices) into homes and setting them on fire,” Baba Shehu Gulumba, a government administrator in Bama district, told AFP.

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“They then went on a shooting spree, opening fire on confused residents as they tried to flee, killing 60 people and injuring several others,” Gulumba said by phone from Maiduguri, the state capital.

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The attackers stormed Amchaka and neighboring villages in Bama using trucks, motorcycles and two armoured vehicles, shooting residents and torching homes, he said.

Other local sources confirmed the attack but did not give a death toll.

The assailants vandalised boreholes, the only water source for the villagers, Gulumba added.

The attacks have prompted a mass exodus of people from villages in the area.

Across the border in northern Cameroon, Cameroon security forces killed three suspected Boko Haram Islamists in Amchide town, a security source there said.

Military reinforcements were in the area because armed Boko Haram militants opened fire at a police post in the town earlier Sunday, injuring one gendarme and a policeman, the source said.

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Scores have been killed in recent days in Borno state, according to local lawmakers.

Fearing attack, around 400 students in the state had boycotted university entrance exams on Saturday.

The military announced a state of emergency last May in northern Nigeria and launched a major offensive to crush the Boko Haram insurgency, which has been running for five years and has claimed thousands of lives.

The rebels say they are fighting to create a strict Islamic state in northern Nigeria.

Violence in the region — which includes Yobe and Adamawa as well as Borno — has already killed some 1,500 people this year alone.

Boko Haram, which means “Western education is sinful” in the Hausa language, has attacked isolated villages, schools and churches as well as military bases.

The conflict has forced hundreds of thousands of people to flee to other Nigerian states and neighbouring countries.

The United States has declared Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau a “global terrorist” and has put a $7 million bounty on his head.

Public secondary schools in Borno state were last month closed indefinitely following deadly attacks. The closure affects 85 secondary schools, catering to some 120,000 students.

In late February, 43 students were shot and hacked to death when suspected Boko Haram gunmen stormed the Federal Government College in Buni Yadi, in Yobe state.

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43 killed in Nigeria in suspected Boko Haram school attack

TAGS: Boko Haram, Borno, Insurgency, Nigeria, Unrest

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