Boko Haram
jihadists made a failed Christmas Day attempt to attack Nigeria’s major
northeast city of Maiduguri as they were pushed out by Nigerian soldiers after
a
prolonged gun battle, military and militia sources told AFP.
The
jihadists in “several” pickup trucks opened fire on a military checkpoint on
the Molai outskirts of the city at around 5:30 pm (1630 GMT) on Monday,
triggering a gun fight that lasted for more than an hour.
“The
terrorists came in several pickups and engaged troops at Molai who fought and
repelled the attack with aerial support,” said a senior military officer in
Maiduguri.
“It was
clear they wanted to overrun the checkpoint and enter the city to cause
mayhem,” said the military officer who requested anonymity.
The gunmen
used the cover of a convoy of civilian vehicles under military escort returning
from the town of Damboa, 90 kilometres away, to launch the attack, said Ibrahim
Liman, a militia leader assisting the Nigerian army in fighting the Islamists.
“One of the
Boko Haram vehicles infiltrated the middle section of a civilian convoy…and
engaged soldiers,” Liman said.
Boko Haram
reinforcements lurking in the nearby Cashew Plantation and Jiddari Polo areas
joined in the battle, Liman added.
The fighting
prompted Molai residents to flee into Maiduguri and the influx caused panic
among residents.
Troop
reinforcements from the city were deployed to Molar and helped in repelling the
attack, the military source said.
It was not
possible to immediately establish the number of casualties as the scene of the
fighting was cordoned off by troops after the gunmen were pushed out at 7:20 pm
(1820 GMT), Liman said.
Security had
been tightened in Maiduguri for the Christmas weekend in anticipation of
possible Boko Haram attacks. Police issued a statement asking residents to be
vigilant and report suspicious persons and abandoned objects to security
personnel.
Earlier
Monday, troops in nearby Yobe state gunned down 10 jihadists who tried to
attack a military post on a highway linking the two states, according to
militia leader Mustapha Karimbe.
“Soldiers
killed 10 of the terrorists and recovered four pickups while the rest fled,”
Karimbe said.
Boko Haram’s
eight-year insurgency has killed 20,000 people and displaced 2.6 million more
in Nigeria. In recent months attacks on military and civilian targets as well
as raids on remote villages in the northeast have increased.
The surge in
attacks has been attributed to Boko Haram’s desperate search for much-needed
weapons and food supplies following military offensives which cut off the
militants’ supply routes.
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