Nigeria's military said on Saturday that it had killed 53
fighters from the Islamist Boko Haram group when it repelled an attack on a
military base in the northeast Nigerian town of Damboa.
A statement from defence spokesman Major-General Chris
Olukolade added that five soldiers and a senior military officer had also been
killed in an exchange of fire on Friday night. The military often reports high
casualty figures for the rebels and relatively low ones on its own side. It is
usually not possible to verify these reports independently.Continue...
Earlier, police said insurgents had attacked the Damboa
base, in the northeasterly Borno state, with rocket-propelled grenades. A
security source said the raid was a revenge mission after dozens of Boko Haram
militants were killed in an air and ground attack on two of their camps in the
Yejiwa and Alagarno areas.
In a separate incident, also on Friday, a suicide bomber
targeting worshippers at a mosque in a remote village in the village of Konduga
in northeast Nigeria killed five people and wounded dozens, a security source
said on Saturday, in an area where Islamist insurgents are mounting attacks
almost daily.
The source, who declined to be named, said Muslims in the
village were observing Friday prayers when the pick-up truck approached.
A local vigilante group stopped the truck to inspect it and
the bomber then detonated the bomb a few metres from the mosque, he said. There
was no immediate claim of responsibility, but Boko Haram was likely to be the
prime suspect.
VAN CARRYING FIREWOOD
Witness Mohammadu Sheriff said he had seen the vigilantes
conducting checks on a pick-up van carrying firewood.
"Suddenly it exploded," he told Reuters by phone.
"It would have been more devastating if the bomber had succeeded in
driving near the mosque, which had over a thousand people in it."
Boko Haram has killed many thousands since launching an
uprising in 2009, and several hundred in the past two months, as it has stepped
up a campaign against civilians in the northeast.
The militants, who are fighting for an Islamic state in
religiously mixed Nigeria, see all who do not subscribe to their austere brand
of Sunni Islam as enemies, and often attack mosques as well as churches,
especially ones they regard as too moderate.
They have become by far the biggest security threat to
Nigeria - Africa's most populous country, largest economy and leading energy
producer.
The kidnapping of more than 200 schoolgirls by Boko Haram from
the village of Chibok in April made world headlines. Despite pledges of Western
support and promises by President Goodluck Jonathan to free them, they remain
in captivity.
A spate of bombings across the north and centre of Nigeria
in the past three months has also demonstrated the rebels' ability to strike
outside of their northeastern stronghold.
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