Boko Haram raid Nigeria town, loot food supplies
Boko Haram's insurgency has triggered a major food emergency in northeastern Nigeria
Boko
Haram Islamists have raided a town in restive northeast Nigeria,
looting food supplies and burning homes after overwhelming troops,
residents told AFP on Thursday.
The attack late on Wednesday
happened in Magumeri, some 50 kilometres (30 miles) northwest of the
Borno state capital, Maiduguri.
It came after a lull in raids on
major towns in the remote region following sweeping military offensives
which Nigeria has claimed has severely weakened the jihadists to the
point of defeat.
Scores of Boko Haram fighters arrived in Magumeri
at about 6:30 pm (1730 GMT) in vans, motorcycles and on foot, firing
heavy weapons and rocket-propelled grenades, forcing residents to flee.
"They
(Boko Haram) broke into shops and homes and took away every food item
they came across," said local resident Kulo Sheriff, who fled the town
then returned on Thursday morning.
"They set fire to homes and shops as they looted them before heading into the bush hours later."
Before
looting, the fighters attacked a military base and a police station
where there was a shoot-out, according to a civilian militia member
assisting troops with security.
Militants overpowered the security
personnel who withdrew, allowing them to loot and burn down the base
and the police station, he added.
- 'Famine-like conditions' -
Nigeria's
military, however, claimed to have repelled the attack and "neutralised
quite a number of the attackers", recovering three vehicles and a
"large quantity of arms and ammunition".
Independent verification
was not possible given access restrictions for reporters to travel
outside Maiduguri without military permission.
Either way, the
raid indicated that Boko Haram still has the capacity to attack major
towns, despite claims it is in disarray since troops flushed them out of
their Sambisa Forest stronghold.
The number of raids has
decreased since the camps were routed last December, although there have
been sustained attempts at suicide bombings in Maiduguri.
A
civilian militia member in the city maintained Boko Haram have been
weakened and their attacks were designed to re-stock dwindling food
supplies, as supply lines have been cut off.
"Boko Haram are
starving in the bush, they live on very little food," said Babakura
Kolo. "They are pushed more by hunger to carry out raids than desire to
fight."
Last month Boko Haram fighters went door-to-door seizing
food aid distributed days earlier in Gajiram, some 100 kilometres by
road from Magumeri, after a battle with police and soldiers.
Boko
Haram's insurgency has triggered a major humanitarian crisis in
northeastern Nigeria, where 7.1 million people are "severely food
insecure", according to the UN.
Aid agencies say parts of Borno state are suffering from "famine-like conditions".
Poor governance and climate change have also been powerful contributors to the crisis in the region.
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