Cameroon’s Information Minister, Issa Bakari, has said no fewer than 800
Boko Haram fighters have attacked Fotokol in the north of the country,
where 90 civilians have been killed.
Bakari also said on Thursday
that the extremists, which started their attack on Wednesday from
Gamboru area of Nigeria, burned churches, mosques and villages and
slaughtered youth, who resisted joining them to fight the Cameroonian
forces.
Details later..
http://www.punchng.com/news/boko-haram-invades-northern-cameroon-kills-90-civilians/
YAOUNDE,
Cameroon — Boko Haram fighters have shot or burned to death about 90
civilians and wounded 500 in ongoing fighting in a Cameroonian border
town near Nigeria, officials in Cameroon said
Thursday.
Some 800
Islamic extremists attacking the town of Fotokol have ‘‘burned churches,
mosques and villages and slaughtered youth who resisted joining them to
fight Cameroonian forces,’’ Information Minister Issa Tchiroma Bakari
said.
The insurgents from Nigeria also looted livestock and food in
the fighting that began Wednesday and was continuing Thursday, Bakari
told The Associated Press.
Boko Haram is using civilians as
shields, making it difficult to confront them although reinforcements
have arrived in Fotokol, according to military spokesman Col. Didier
Badjeck.
Schools also have been razed by the insurgents, whose
nickname, Boko Haram, means ‘‘Western education is forbidden’’ in the
Hausa language.
Hundreds of insurgents were killed Wednesday
compared to the loss of 13 Chadian and 6 Cameroonian troops, Defense
Minister Edgard Alain Mebe Ngo said. At least 91 civilians have been
killed and most of more than 500 wounded people cannot be immediately
taken to the hospitals, he said. There was no way to immediately confirm
the account independently.
The fighters are believed to have
crossed into Cameroon from nearby Gamboru, a Nigerian border town that
had been an extremist stronghold since November. Gamboru was retaken
earlier this week and the fighters driven out by Chadian and Nigerian
air strikes supported by Chadian ground troops.
African Union
officials on Thursday were finalizing plans for a multinational force to
fight the spreading Boko Haram uprising, although there are questions
about funding. The AU last week authorized a 7,500-strong force from
Nigeria and its four neighbors, Cameroon, Chad, Niger and Benin.
Senior
officers from the U.N. peacekeeping department are attending the
meeting in Yaounde, Cameroon’s capital, said a U.N. official.
The
Africans want U.N. Security Council approval and money to fund the
mission, said the official who spoke Wednesday at the United Nations and
insisted on anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the
press on the meeting.
France’s President Francois Hollande said
Thursday his country is providing support with weapons, logistics and
operations for the multinational effort. At a news conference in Paris,
he stopped short of saying whether France is actually involved in
military action itself. France has a big air base at N’Djamena, the
capital of Chad, which will lead the multinational force.
International
concern has grown as Boko Haram has increased the tempo and ferocity of
its attacks just as Nigeria is preparing for presidential and
legislative elections on Feb. 14.
Some 10,000 people were killed
in Boko Haram violence last year compared to 2,000 in the first four
years of Nigeria’s Islamic uprising, according to the Council on Foreign
Relations.
http://www.bostonglobe.com/news/world/2015/02/05/boko-haram-fighters-kill-least-civilians-wound/RHAa7fJYvLLr5J5jXqo10I/story.html
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