The members of the Boko Haram Islamic
sect attacked Gaya village in Hong Local Government Area of Adamawa
State in the early hours of Thursday.
Investigations revealed that the
rampaging insurgents killed 30 indigenes of the community said to be
located near the Sambisa Forest.
The insurgents were also said to have burnt several buildings in the community before fleeing the area.
The attack came shortly after the
military liberated 11 communities from the insurgents. The military
killed over 300 of the insurgents with several calibre of arms and
ammunition seized from them on Tuesday.
A security source explained that the
insurgents, who were routed out of their Sambisa Forest training base by
the combined team of Air Force and Army personnel operating in the
area, had resorted to attacking communities that were far away from
areas being covered by the military’s presence.
The men of the Nigerian Air Force and
ground forces of the Army had been raiding the vast Sambisa Forest since
last week in a bid to destroy the camps of the insurgents located in
the forest.
It was learnt that the insurgents were targeting remote communities without military presence for destructive attacks.
The source said, “The fighters of the
Boko Haram sect attacked Gaya community in Hong Local Government Area
here in Adamawa State.
“They killed over 30 people and burnt
down several buildings in the community. You know that that community is
in the border area just by the Sambisa Forest.
“Those who attacked the community were
dislodged from the Sambisa Forest by the ongoing raid being carried out
by the Air Force and the ground soldiers.
“The military is now in control of a
large part of the Sambisa Forest and the insurgents are moving in bands
and launching attacks on the communities that are far from where the
soldiers checkpoints are.”
The Director of Defence Information,
Maj. Gen. Chris Olukolade, said that he was not aware of such an attack
on the community near the Sambisa Forest.
He, however, said that a combined
operation by the personnel of the Nigerian Air Force and the ground
troops had resulted in the death of many insurgents in Sambisa Forest
and parts of Gwoza.
Olukolade said in a statement on
Thursday that the air strikes which hit targets with precision resulted
in a heavy casualty among the insurgents.
He said, “A concerted air campaign by
the Nigerian Air Force is ongoing in furtherance of the mission to clear
terrorists from all their enclaves.
“The air strikes, which today targeted
the training camps and logistics dumps of the terrorists in Sambisa
forests and parts of Gwoza, have been highly successful as it achieved
the aims with required precision.
“The death of a large number of
terrorists has been recorded while many others are also scampering all
over the forest and out of the struck bases.
“Details of casualty will be determined in subsequent phases of the operation.
“Meanwhile, the strikes continue in
other locations of the theatre heralding the advance of troops and other
elements of the mission.”
Meanwhile, 158 women and children
abducted by the Boko Haram militants, who regained their freedom
sometimes last month, on Thursday reunited with their family members in
Yobe State.
The women and children were abducted in
Katarko town of Gujba Local Government Area of the state, a distance of
22 kilometres south of Damaturu, the state capital.
Presenting the victims to their family
members, the Chairman of the state Committee on Rehabilitation and
Resettlement of Insurgency Victims, Ahmed Goneri, said of the 158
victims, 62 are adults while the remaining 96 are children.
Of the 62 adults, according to him, 15
are now widows because of the attack on the town. He said that the
abductees were “today being handed over to their family members.
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