Local residents reported that the gunmen killed several people, burnt hundreds of homes and looted scores of businesses in Saturday’s attacks, although there was no official death toll.
The Islamists are believed to control large swathes of land in northeastern Nigeria since launching an uprising in 2009 that has now claimed more than 13,000 lives.
The base outside the town of Baga is used by the Multinational Joint Task Force (MNJTF), which was established in 1998 to battle cross-border crime but whose mandate was expanded to fighting the deadly Boko Haram insurgency.
The gunmen seized the base near Lake Chad after engaging troops in a fierce battle that lasted several hours, witnesses said.
“They (the militants) overwhelmed the troops and forced them to abandon the base which the gunmen took over,” local resident Usman Dansubdu told AFP after fleeing to neighbouring Chad.
Hundreds of fear-stricken residents from Baga and five other Nigerian towns and fishing villages poured into Chad to escape the Islamist raids on their homes, witnesses said.
Maina Ma’aji Lawan, the senator representing northern Borno where Baga is located, confirmed the attack on the military base and other five locations.
‘Overpowered the troops’
“Boko Haram insurgents launched attacks in Baga area yesterday (Saturday), destroying six towns and several settlements, forcing the people in the affected places to flee into Chad.
“They came in unbelievably large numbers and overpowered the multinational troops and local vigilantes,” he told AFP.
“They took over the multinational troop base in Baga and sent the soldiers fleeing,” he told AFP.
The force is made up of troops from Nigeria, Niger and Chad, Nigerian army spokesman Brigadier General Olajide Laleye told AFP.
Residents of Kauyen Kuros, Mile 3, Mile 4, Baga, Doron-Baga and Bundaram fled across the lake in fishing boats and canoes into Chad following the hours-long attacks by hundreds of militants from the Islamist group.
“We are now seeking refuge in Gubuwa, Kangallam and Kaiga villages inside Chad near the border with Nigeria,” Dansubdu told AFP by telephone from Gubuwa.
The gunmen killed several people, burnt hundreds of homes and looted scores of businesses in the attacks that lasted over seven hours, said Doron-Baga resident Lawan Ajikalumbu who also fled to Gubuwa.
There was no official casualty toll.
Abubakar Gamandi, head of the fishermen’s union in Borno state and a resident of Baga, said he received several calls from union members who fled to neighboring Chad informing him of the attacks.
Baga was the scene of the deadliest Boko Haram attack in April 2013 when 185 people were killed and more than 2,000 homes were destroyed in fighting between the Islamists and members of the multinational force.
Suspected Boko Haram gunmen late Saturday also raided the town of Babban Gida, 50 kilometers (30 miles) from Damaturu, the capital of neighboring Yobe state, according to residents.
The militants destroyed the military barracks, torched a deserted government boarding school and a local administration building after overpowering soldiers in a gunfight, they said.
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