Boko Haram killed four people and abducted four women from a village in
northeast Nigeria, the military said on Wednesday, dismissing the
Islamists as weakened and increasingly desperate.
Army spokesman Colonel Sani Usman told AFP the attack happened on
Tuesday morning in Kutuva, in the Damboa local government area of Borno
state, which has been hardest hit by seven years of fighting.
“Boko Haram terrorists riding on six motorcycles attacked the
village. They killed four residents and abducted four women,” he said.
“Residents of neighbouring Kaya village mobilised and pursued the
terrorists. They traced them to Sabon Garin Baale but unfortunately they
lost track of the gunmen.”
Such hit-and-run attacks were a regular feature of the Islamic State
group affiliate’s tactics in the remote region but have become
increasingly rare since the beginning of 2015.
Thousands of women have also been seized in the conflict, including
more than 200 schoolgirls from the town of Chibok, which is some 70
kilometres (44 miles) away by road.
A military counter-insurgency has recaptured swathes of territory
seized and controlled by the militants in 2014, pushing them out into
border areas around Lake Chad.
The army has since April been mounting a push against Boko Haram’s
stronghold in the Sambisa Forest area of Borno, which is near Damboa
local government area.
Usman said soldiers and civilian militia had been deployed to the
area of the kidnapping but it was unclear whether the gunmen were
heading for the Sambisa Forest or elsewhere.
“They are doing their best to track them down and rescue the women,” he added.
“Boko Haram have been severely weakened. But they are trying to save
face. That’s why they’re trying to launch attacks on soft targets.
“They’re now facing lots of challenges. Our troops are mounting pressure on them, which has cut off most of their supply routes.“Just a few days ago 17 Boko Haram terrorists surrendered to the
civilian JTF in the Damboa area. They were forced to surrender out of
starvation.”
Source

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