MAIDUGURI (AFP) – Suspected Islamist
insurgents dressed in military uniforms set up checkpoints in an attack in
Nigeria’s northeast, killing
an unclear number of people and burning dozens of
buildings, residents and authorities said Wednesday.
The attack on Tuesday evening in the
Benishiek community in Borno state saw suspected members of Islamist extremist
group Boko Haram invade the area, attacking residents and motorists.
One of the burnt school buildings in
Maiduguri
A Borno state government official
said at least five local residents were killed in addition to an unclear number
of motorists travelling through the area, while about 50 buildings housing
shops and homes were burnt.
“Based on the information at hand,
only five residents of the area were killed,” said Garba Ngamdu, an adviser to
the state governor.
“A large chunk of the victims were
motorists travelling on the highway, although we do not have a tentative figure
yet.”
An army spokesman confirmed the
attack and said a number of residents and tanker drivers had been killed, but
declined to provide further details.
Residents recounted seeing bodies
along the roadside and said the attackers were singling out those from Borno
state.
The reason why was not immediately
clear, but Boko Haram members have repeatedly carried out revenge attacks
against residents over the emergence of vigilante groups that have formed to
assist the military.
“The militants arrived in military
vans and uniforms around 6:00 pm (1700 GMT),” Mallam Isa Manu, a motorist who
escaped unhurt, told journalists in the Borno state capital Maiduguri.
“They set up checkpoints on the
Damaturu-Maiduguri highway and ordered motorists to park and identify
themselves.”
Benishiek was also the scene of
clashes on September 8 between suspected Boko Haram gunmen and vigilantes.
Five Islamists and 13 vigilantes
were reported to have been killed.
A military offensive launched in May
aiming to end Boko Haram’s four-year insurgency appears to have pushed the
extremists outside of major cities and into more remote areas, where attacks
have been occurring.
Separately on Wednesday, the
military claimed a strike on a Boko Haram camp in the northeast last week left
about 150 Islamists and 16 soldiers dead, amid reports of dozens of troops
killed.
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