Army appeals for support
after ‘deadliest’ Boko Haram attack
Nigeria’s
military has called for support in tackling Boko Haram after a major attack on
a key northeast town that is feared could be the worst in the bloody six-year
insurgency.
There are
still no independently corroborated figures for the huge numbers said to have
been killed in Baga, on the shores of Lake Chad in the far north of Borno
State.
But
defence spokesman Chris Olukolade said in a statement issued late Saturday that
the description of the assault as “the deadliest” in a conflict that has
claimed more than 13,000 lives since 2009 was “quite valid”.
“The
attack on the town by the bloodhounds and their activities since January 3rd,
2015, should convince well-meaning people all over the world that Boko Haram is
the evil all must collaborate to end, rather than vilifying those working to
check them,” he said.
Nigeria’s
military — west Africa’s largest — has faced repeated criticism for failing to
end the six-year Islamist insurgency, as well as allegations of human rights
abuses.
Soldiers
have complained of a lack of adequate weapons and even refused to deploy to
take on the better-armed rebels, who want to create a hardline Islamic state in
northeast Nigeria.
With
elections set for next month, Nigeria’s government has also been accused of
playing politics with the insurgency, as most of the areas worst affected by
the violence are main opposition strongholds.
But Olukolade
said: “The Nigerian military has not given up on Baga and other localities
where terrorist activities are now prevalent.
“Appropriate
plans, men and resources are presently being mobilised to address the
situation,” he said on defenceinfo.mil.ng, in the military’s first detailed
comment on last weekend’s attack.
The
military and government often makes such statements, without giving specific
details, yet there are reports of attacks on an almost daily basis.
On
Saturday, two explosions rocked northeast Nigeria, including one at a crowded
market in the Borno State capital, Maiduguri, by a girl suicide bomber thought
to be just 10. Nineteen people were killed.
The Baga
attack, which local officials said forced at least 20,000 people to flee, also
overran the headquarters of the Multinational Joint Task Force made up of
troops from Nigeria, Niger and Chad.
Nigerien
and Chadian soldiers were not at the base at the time.
Olukolade
said 14 soldiers were killed and more than 30 injured as well as “several” insurgents.
There was
no credible estimate yet of the numbers of civilians killed, after huge numbers
cited locally, he added.
“It is
necessary to reassure Nigerians that the Nigerian Armed Forces and security
agencies are capable of flushing out the terrorists from Baga and all parts of
the nation’s territory where their activities are prevalent.”
–
Territorial gains –
Boko
Haram has seized dozens of towns and villages in northeast Nigeria in the last
six months and now reportedly controls the border areas of Borno state with
Niger, Chad and Cameroon.
The
territorial gains have led to fears of a total loss of government control in
the remote region — and a claim last year by a senior US diplomat that the
military was in denial about the situation.
Olukolade
maintained on Saturday: “No portion of Nigeria’s territory has been or will be
conceded to terrorists.
“The use
of all available resources within the armed forces will continue to be
maximised to sustain the tempo of the counter-terrorism campaign towards
containing and eradicating terrorism in the nation’s territory.”

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