The Nigerian military on Wednesday in Abuja said it had
repelled a terrorists’ attack on Biu, Borno.
This is contained in a statement posted on the Defence
Headquarters website.
The statement said that two Anti-Aircraft guns were also
captured from the terrorists by the troops.
It added that troops were pursuing the fleeing terrorists,
while mop-up operation was ongoing.
It also said that five terrorists had so far been captured,
adding that details of the operation would be communicated later.
Several dozen
fighters belonging to the Boko Haram militant group drove into Biu in pick-up
trucks and on motorcycles, witness Yahaya Mshelliza told Reuters by telephone.
“They came shouting ‘Allahu Akbar’ (God is greatest) and
shooting everywhere, but confronted by the soldiers for three hours, most them
were killed,” Mshelliza said.
“At the moment only three escaped into the bush and are
being pursued by the soldiers.”
Growing insecurity linked to Islamist militants is a major
issue for President Goodluck Jonathan a month before polls in which he faces a
rival, Muhammadu Buhari, who was seen as tough on security when he was a
military ruler in the 1980s.
Nigeria’s military headquarters, which rarely comments on
attacks, confirmed the incident on its Twitter account.
It was the second attack on a major town by Boko Haram
militants in the past two weeks.
“Terrorist attack repelled by the military in Biu,” the
military tweeted. “Troops in pursuit of fleeing terrorists.”
It said that five Boko Haram fighers had been captured as
well as two anti-aircraft guns.
Witness Mohammadu Idi said he saw at least 17 bodies of Boko
Haram fighters “littered on the road” near the Biu army barracks after the
attack.
The group’s fighters seized the military base and town of
Baga, on the shores of Lake Chad, on January 3.
Baga was the headquarters of a multinational force with
troops from Chad, Niger and Cameroon.
The militants have killed scores and razed dozens of homes
there, with the military putting the death toll at 150, while some local
officials have put it as high as 2,000.
The rebels remain in control of Baga, which Nigerian forces
backed by air power have tried so far unsuccessfully to retake.
The United States said on Tuesday it sees the February 14
election in Nigeria, Africa’s biggest economy, as a factor behind the sharp
rise in attacks by Boko Haram, a group which has killed thousands since
launching an uprising five years ago.
On Tuesday, a suicide bomber blew himself up outside a
mosque in the northeastern city of Gombe, killing at least two other people and
wounding 14 during prayers
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