(Reuters) - Nigerian security forces fighting the Boko
Haram Islamist sect in the northeast of the country said on Friday they had
killed two commanders from the group and arrested eight other members in two
separate incidents.
The sect has killed hundreds in attacks on security
forces, government offices and churches since launching an uprising in 2009
with the aim of carving out an Islamic state.
Agents from the secret service stopped a car at a check
point on the outskirts of Maiduguri on Wednesday and the occupants opened fire
on them, said Lieutenant Colonel Sagir Musa, spokesman for joint military and
police forces in the north-eastern city.
He said security forces returned fire and killed the
commanders.
"The two sect members were top commanders
coordinating the sect activities in Mubi and Yola, in Adamawa and Yobe
states," Musa said, adding that in a separate incident in Maiduguri eight
Boko Haram suspects were arrested.
The details could not be independently verified and
there was no immediate response from Boko Haram, which is based in Maiduguri.
Nigeria's biggest security threat, Boko Haram has
managed large-scale, damaging assaults, including one in January where at least
186 people died in coordinated attacks in Kano, the north's biggest city.
This week, authorities said they had killed the sect's
spokesman Abu Qaqa and another senior commander while members of Boko Haram
were suspected of killing a former top prison warder and the attorney general
Borno state, of which Maiduguri is the capital.
It remains unclear if the loss of Qaqa will
significantly weaken the sect or if it was indeed him.
Nigerian forces have previously claimed to have killed
or captured him only for the militant to subsequently issue a statement denying
it. No statement has been issued this week.