No fewer
than 100 persons are believed to have been killed in Borno State following
Tuesday's attack by the terrorist group Boko Haram on four border communities
with Cameroun.
The attack, it was learnt, was a retaliatory one on the villages of Attagara, Ngoshe, Agapalawa and Aganjara in Gwoza Local Government Area of the troubled state.
A resident of Maiduguri, who lost his brother in the attack, told journalists on the condition of anonymity that the armed men dressed in military camouflage drove into the communities in all-terrain vehicles and motorbikes.
The attack, it was learnt, was a retaliatory one on the villages of Attagara, Ngoshe, Agapalawa and Aganjara in Gwoza Local Government Area of the troubled state.
A resident of Maiduguri, who lost his brother in the attack, told journalists on the condition of anonymity that the armed men dressed in military camouflage drove into the communities in all-terrain vehicles and motorbikes.
They
subsequently gathered the unsuspecting villagers and opened fire on them.
Gwoza is located in the southeastern part of Borno State and about 135 kilometres away from Maiduguri, the capital of the state presently ravaged by the Boko Haram insurgency.
Gwoza is located in the southeastern part of Borno State and about 135 kilometres away from Maiduguri, the capital of the state presently ravaged by the Boko Haram insurgency.
A security
source said: “The community actually thought the gunmen were military
personnel. It didn't occur to them that they were Boko Haram members. It was
too late by the time they found out as the insurgents indiscriminately opened
fire on them.
“As I speak
to you over 83 corpses are lying in the villages and yet to be buried.”
An indigene of the area, Ibrahim, but is resident in Maiduguri, also said he had been in touch with three of his relations who were fortunate enough to escape during the onslaught on the communities.
An indigene of the area, Ibrahim, but is resident in Maiduguri, also said he had been in touch with three of his relations who were fortunate enough to escape during the onslaught on the communities.
He said his
fleeing relations were lucky to have escaped the attack but had to return to
the village again for fear that they could be traced in the bush by the
terrorists.
According to Ibrahim, his relatives who were unaware of the level of killings were shell-shocked when they found out the magnitude of the destruction of human lives and property.
Though attempts to get the confirmation of security operatives were unsuccessful at the time of filing this report, a security source disclosed that the communities lost 83 persons.
According to Ibrahim, his relatives who were unaware of the level of killings were shell-shocked when they found out the magnitude of the destruction of human lives and property.
Though attempts to get the confirmation of security operatives were unsuccessful at the time of filing this report, a security source disclosed that the communities lost 83 persons.
A local lawmaker, Peter Biye, and other residents also told AFP: “There were deadly attacks on these villages by Boko Haram insurgents who killed a large number of people and destroyed homes."
Biye, who represents the area in the House of Representatives, said: “We are still trying to compile a toll of the dead as people on the ground are still counting the number of casualties.”
Many residents fled across the border into neighbouring Cameroun, as soldiers were deployed to fight the Islamists, who took over at least seven villages, Biye added.
“Boko Haram has hoisted their flags in at least seven villages in the area which they now claim to be under their control," said the lawmaker.
Military jets bombarded Boko Haram positions in the affected area to try to flush out the insurgents, he added.
Abba Goni,
who lives in the mainly Muslim village of Ngoshe, said the gunmen were armed
with Kalashnikov assault weapons and rocket-propelled grenades. The entire
village of about 300 homes was razed with several mosques, he added.
“We lost many people, including (civilian) vigilantes who tried to fight off the Boko Haram attackers. At least 100 people were killed,” said Goni, who fled to nearby Gamboru Ngala.
“We lost many people, including (civilian) vigilantes who tried to fight off the Boko Haram attackers. At least 100 people were killed,” said Goni, who fled to nearby Gamboru Ngala.
In the predominantly Christian village of Attagara, homes and a church were also set on fire while dozens of residents were killed, according to Bulus Yashi, who also escaped to Gamboru Ngala.
“It was a reprisal over the casualties Boko Haram suffered in the village in two previous attacks,” he said.
On Sunday, around a dozen gunmen on motorcycles opened fire on a church in the village killing nine worshippers. But residents mobilised and pursued the attackers, killing four and arresting four others, he added.
Villagers
had also repelled an attack on the village on May 25, killing seven Boko Haram
gunmen, he said. “We believe they came on a revenge mission,” he added.
In another community, however, the terror sect suffered some losses when 20 of its members were arrested by irate youths who took them on when they attacked their village.
In another community, however, the terror sect suffered some losses when 20 of its members were arrested by irate youths who took them on when they attacked their village.
A local chief, Mallam Dawa Pogu of a community in Askira/Uba Local Government Area of the state, told journalists yesterday that the insurgents invaded Mbulakudla village where they killed two people, but some brave young men pursued them and arrested 20 of them.
He said they were subsequently taken to security operatives in the area for appropriate action.
According to him, the insurgents attacked the village at about 2 am on Tuesday and started shooting into the air and raiding people's houses.
They killed two people in the process but where subsequently repelled by the youths who came out en masse to confront them.
Pogu said if the people do not wake up to protect themselves, the entire village would soon be wiped out by the sect.
He said: “We are thinking of the future of our children, they come they kill and they leave unchallenged. If we continue like this, there will be no village around our area in the near future.
"Everybody is running from one village to another village and when the other supposedly safe village is attacked, they run again to another village. For how long shall we continue running away from these criminals who have no respect for religion or tribe?"
He revealed that all villages along the highway from Maiduguri to Askira/Uba had all been wiped out with only few villages left standing.
“We have security but they cannot come to our aid because they too are human and have their own problems, they would not come to rescue villages that are being attacked. Unless the government looks into their problems and solves it, we will continue to have problems,” he said.
He said the last time he held discussions with some security operatives, they told him that they were not mobilised and their allowances had not been paid.
According to him, not all security operatives stationed in their localities were trustworthy, as the villagers often wonder why the terrorists kill people and destroy property at will despite the presence of security personnel in the state