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Boko Haram Attacks Nigeria Military Base

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Eniola Olayemi

 
Seven people were killed when Boko Haram fighters attacked a military base in remote northeast Nigeria, setting fire to shelters for those displaced by the conflict, military and humanitarian sources told AFP Tuesday.

He attack in Rann, some 175 kilometres (110 miles) northeast of the Borno state capital, Maiduguri, began late on Monday afternoon and forced civilians to flee.

It followed a pattern by the Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) faction of Boko Haram that has called into question government claims the group is virtually defeated.

A similar attempt was made to take over a military base in Magumeri, 50 kilometres northwest of Maiduguri, on Sunday, a local community leader said.

Rann currently hosts around 35,000 internally displaced people (IDPs), according to the International Organization for Migration.

It has been repeatedly hit in the conflict, exacerbating already dire humanitarian conditions on the ground.

A military source in Maiduguri said the attack began at about 5:20 pm (1620 GMT) on Monday.

Poor visibility because of seasonal Harmattan winds hampered the deployment of air force jets, and troops were forced to withdraw, he said.

“So far we have three soldiers killed and two others are still unaccounted for,” he said. “The base was burned by the terrorists, who took away weapons and vehicles left by the troops when they withdrew.”

Locals and IDPs fled as the Islamist militants set fire to camps and shelters, he said. There was no immediate official response from the military when contacted by AFP.

– Camps torched –

An aid worker in Maiduguri said colleagues in Rann blamed ISWAP for the raid and people fled towards Bulale, on the Cameroon side of the border.

“Four IDPs were killed. Two were shot dead while two were slaughtered by the attackers. Several shelters were burned.

They also looted food supplies in the town,” the source said. Reinforcements from Gamboru, some 40 kilometres away, arrived in Rann on Tuesday morning, the aid worker said.

The United Nations last week said more than 30,000 people fled after a similar attack in and around the Borno town of Baga in late December. Some 260 aid workers had also been forced to withdraw from three local government areas in northern Borno near Lake Chad, where ISWAP are known to operate.

Humanitarian operations in Rann were suspended in March last year after another attack on a military base, which killed three aid workers.

Two out of three health workers who were kidnapped have since been executed. Scores of people were killed in January 2017 when Nigerian air force jets mistakenly bombed the IDP camp in Rann.

The Islamist insurgency began in 2009 and has killed more than 27,000. Some 1.8 million people are still homeless.