Boko Haram attack leaves over 50 dead and sees 100 inmates freed from jail in Nigeria
Suspected members of the Nigerian Islamist sect Boko Haram armed with machine guns laid siege on the northeastern town of Bama, freeing over 100 prison inmates and leaving 55 people dead, the military said.
Around 200 heavily armed members of Boko Haram arrived in buses and pickup
trucks and carried out a coordinated strike, first hitting the army barracks
and the police station before breaking into the town's prison, military
spokesman Sagir Musa reported.
Musa said 22 police officers, 14 prison officials, two soldiers and four
civilians were killed, while 13 of the group's own members died, in what was
one of the rebel's most deadly single strikes since a 2009 uprising.
Gunmen freed 105 prisoners during the raid which began at around 5am and
lasted almost five hours, Musa said. Some of the attackers were seen to be
dressed in army uniforms.
Bama's police station, army barracks and government buildings were set ablaze.
"They came in army uniform pretending to be soldiers but were able to
detect them," Musa said.
Bama is a small, remote town in northeastern Borno state, Boko Haram's home
state and the nucleus of its attacks.
"The call to prayer was just being said at about 5am when the Boko Haram started shooting from all directions and we ran for our lives," eyewitness Amina Usman told Reuters.
"One woman who could not run burned to death," Usman added.
The Boko Haram sect and offshoots such as the al Qaeda-linked Ansaru, as well as associated criminal networks, pose the main threat to stability in Africa's top energy producer.
Western governments are increasingly concerned about Nigerian militants linking up with other jihadist groups in the West African region.
Boko Haram wants to carve out an Islamic state in a country split roughly equally between Christians and Muslims. One of its chief demands is that its imprisoned members and family members are released and it has carried out several prison breaks.
Attacks by Boko Haram have killed more than 3,000 people since 2009, according to figures published by Human Rights Watch.
Violence in Nigeria's northeast has shown no sign of abating. Clashes between Islamists and a multinational force from Nigeria, Niger and Chad killed dozens of people last month.
A senator who visited the site said 228 people were killed, but the military puts the figure at 37.
President Goodluck Jonathan has set up a committee to work out the terms of an amnesty for the rebels but their leader, Abubakar Shekau, has shown no interest in it so far.
Edited by Steve Wilson
"The call to prayer was just being said at about 5am when the Boko Haram started shooting from all directions and we ran for our lives," eyewitness Amina Usman told Reuters.
"One woman who could not run burned to death," Usman added.
The Boko Haram sect and offshoots such as the al Qaeda-linked Ansaru, as well as associated criminal networks, pose the main threat to stability in Africa's top energy producer.
Western governments are increasingly concerned about Nigerian militants linking up with other jihadist groups in the West African region.
Boko Haram wants to carve out an Islamic state in a country split roughly equally between Christians and Muslims. One of its chief demands is that its imprisoned members and family members are released and it has carried out several prison breaks.
Attacks by Boko Haram have killed more than 3,000 people since 2009, according to figures published by Human Rights Watch.
Violence in Nigeria's northeast has shown no sign of abating. Clashes between Islamists and a multinational force from Nigeria, Niger and Chad killed dozens of people last month.
A senator who visited the site said 228 people were killed, but the military puts the figure at 37.
President Goodluck Jonathan has set up a committee to work out the terms of an amnesty for the rebels but their leader, Abubakar Shekau, has shown no interest in it so far.
Edited by Steve Wilson
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