Military sources
confirmed on Friday that a Lieutenant Colonel, who was the Commander of the 153
Troops Battalion in Kareto was among those killed by Boko Haram jihadists when
they raided the military base in Borno near the border with Niger.
The sources also confirmed that
the insurgents killed several troops and stole weapons.
The insurgents said to be
fighters from the Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) in eight guntrucks
launched a pre-dawn attack Thursday on the base in Kareto village, 335
kilometres (210 miles) north of the Borno state capital Maiduguri, they said.
“The terrorists attacked the 153
Troops Battalion in Kareto around 4:00 am (0300 GMT) and subdued the soldiers
who were forced to withdraw after a hard fight,” an army officer who did not
want to be named told AFP.
“We lost several men but we are
still working to establish their number. One thing we are sure about is that
the base commander, a lieutenant colonel, was among those killed,”
He said.
He said the insurgents ransacked
the base and carted away weapons and vehicles.
The Islamists “took troops by
surprise” while they were working to fix communications equipment that had been
destroyed in a rainstorm, said another officer, who also sought anonymity.
The troops could not seek
support from two nearby bases because of the faulty equipment, he said.
Search and rescue teams were
combing the area for missing soldiers and dead bodies, they added.
Kareto has been repeatedly
attacked by ISWAP fighters who have since July last year targeted dozens of
military bases in attacks that have left scores of soldiers dead in the
volatile region.
Two weeks ago, the jihadists
carried out multiple attacks on military bases in Borno state, overrunning
three of them and stealing weapons after killing soldiers.
On Sunday, ISWAP attacked a
Cameroonian military base near the border with Nigeria in the Lake Chad area,
killing at least 24 people, including 16 troops, according to Cameroon’s
defence ministry.
The ministry also claimed that
64 jihadists were killed in the incident.
Boko Haram’s decade-long
insurgency has killed 27,000 people and displaced about two million in Nigeria.
The violence has spilled over
into neighbouring Niger, Chad and Cameroon, prompting a regional military
coalition to defeat the hardline jihadist group.
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