THIRTY-FIVE bodies in military uniform have been brought to a morgue
in Yobe State, after a coordinated assault by Boko Haram targeting the
security forces, a hospital source told AFP on Monday.
The attack, late last week Thursday in Damaturu, the capital of Yobe
State, was the first raid in a major urban centre in several weeks by
the insurgent group, waging a four-year Islamist uprising.
Police and residents said large numbers of Boko Haram fighters, some
in vehicles and others on foot, stormed Damaturu after dark.
Armed
with guns and explosives, they attacked and torched four police
buildings, sparking a fierce, hours-long gun battle with the security
forces.
“We have received lots of bodies in the last three days from the
attacks. I counted 35 bodies in military uniform,” said a senior
official at the Damaturu Specialist Hospital, who requested anonymity.
An army officer based in the central city of Jos, Plateau State, said
20 soldiers had been admitted at a hospital there, suffering from
“gunshot wounds sustained in the battle against Boko Haram in Damaturu.”
“They were brought here for security reasons and better medical
facilities,” said the officer, who also asked that his name be withheld.
The
military rarely discusses troop fatalities following Islamist attacks
and local officials who disclose such details have faced pressure to
keep quiet.
Contacted by AFP on Monday, Yobe state military spokesman Lazarus Eli
did not deny reports that dozens of soldiers were killed during the
clash.
“We do not have any data on the death toll,” Lazarus said.
Defence spokesman Chris Olukolade disputed the figure of 35 but said the military sustained losses.
“On the part of the military, we did not suffer that volume of
casualties at all,” he said, adding that “definitely there were
casualties on both sides.”
Boko Haram has repeatedly worn military uniforms as a disguise during
attacks and it was not yet clear whether the corpses were those of
insurgents or troops.
The day after the attack, witnesses and local officials did not say the insurgents who staged it were disguised in uniforms.
The sweeping offensive against Boko Haram has entered its fifth
month, and the military has described the group as being in disarray and
no longer capable of attacking major population centres.
But the success of the operation remained unclear and the attack in
Damaturu, apparently carried out by a significant number of insurgents
in a heavily fortified city, had cast further doubt on the effectiveness
of the military offensive.
There are, however, signs that Boko Haram has been pushed back into
the North-East, its stronghold, after carrying out attacks across the
wider North through much of 2011 and 2012.
President Goodluck Jonathan declared a state of emergency across the
North-East in mid-May and vowed to permanently end the uprising.
It is now for the president to now decide whether or not to extend
the emergency measures when the six-month mandate expires next month, as
the conflict had killed thousands since 2009.
Boko Haram has attacked Christians, Muslims, students, politicians
and a range of other groups seen as opposed to the creation of a state
governed by strict Islamic law.
Nigeria is Africa’s most populous country and top oil producer, where
the northern half is mostly Muslim and the more prosperous south is
predominately Christian.
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