Scores were killed on Saturday during attacks on two Borno villages by suspected members of the outlawed Boko Haram sect.
It was also gathered that several
residents were injured in the attacks on the two villages, Koronginim
and Ntsiha near Chibok where over 200 schoolgirls were abducted on April
14.
A source from Koronginim said, “The
attackers are Boko Haram and they, over 20, came to Koronginim in two
vehicles painted in army colour and they all carried different guns.
They opened fire on people as soon as they arrived at about 7am.”
He also said, “Many people just woke up
while many were forced out of their houses. People were fleeing into the
nearby bushes when they saw the attackers but they were being pursued
even into the bush.”
The source, who claimed he narrowly
escaped being killed, added, “The insurgents razed the village and burnt
all our livestock after killing many people.”
“The insurgents surrounded the village.
They attacked the village till about 12pm. We lost many people. They
killed my childhood friend and my uncle. I fled the house, leaving only
my mother,” he said.
A hospital source said many of the injured persons were on admission at the Chibok General Hospital.
A resident of Chibok, in a telephone
chat with journalists, lamented that his relations were among the
victims. “Some of our relations at Koronginim and Ntsiha have been
killed by Boko Haram today.”
Another eyewitness who spoke to Reuters, said the gunmen who wore military uniform and drove in a convoy of sport utility and military vehicles, attacked the village.
The witness who declined to be
identified said the gunmen screamed “Allahu Akbar” just before they
started shooting and killing the villagers.
“Two of their leaders gave orders that
they should shoot anyone on sight. I crawled into the nearby bush and
fled from there,” the witness said.
Meanwhile, in an interview granted to Al Jazeera,
the President’s Senior Special Adviser on Media, Dr. Doyin Okupe, had
boasted that the Nigerian soldiers would have “smoked out” the Boko
Haram insurgents had they remained in the country without fleeing to
Niger and Cameroon after launching attacks.
He said, “What has sustained the war in
favour of Boko Haram was their ability to strike Nigeria and go back in
hiding in Niger or Cameroun. If they stay on this soil, we will smoke
them out.”
Source: The Punch
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