Boko
Haram Islamists claimed five lives in an attack on a mosque in
northeast Nigeria over the weekend, before being repulsed by soldiers
who killed 15 of the insurgents, the military said in a statement
Sunday.
The latest attack by the extremist group, which has been
waging an insurgency since 2009, struck on Saturday morning at Damboa
town in Borno state, the group’s stronghold.
“The terrorists…
attacked worshippers in a mosque and killed five of them who came to
perform their morning prayers,” said the military’s statement quoting
captain Aliyu Ibrahim Danja, army spokesman for the region.
“They also set ablaze the official residence and palace of the District Head along with some shops.
“While
they were unleashing their mayhem, troops under 7 Division engaged the
terrorists, killing 15 in the process while others fled in disarray.”
Borno
was placed under a state of emergency in mid-May, when the military
shut down the mobile phone network to block Islamists from coordinating
attacks in an operation aimed at crushing the insurgency.
With the communication network switched off, details of attacks have been slow to emerge and difficult to verify.
Boko
Haram has said it is fighting to create an Islamic state in northern
Nigeria, but its aims have shifted and the group is believed to consist
of different factions.
The group has attacked churches, mosques,
schools, newspaper offices, the security forces, politicians and a UN
building, among other targets.
The Boko Haram conflict is
estimated to have cost more than 3,600 lives since 2009, including
killings by the security forces, who have been accused of major abuses.
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