Monday, April 22, 2013

'Dozens' killed in Nigeria gun battles

 

KANO: Dozens of people have been killed in fierce fighting between Nigeria's military and suspected militants after troops raided an insurgent hideout in the northeast, a government source told AFP on Monday.

Gun battles broke out in the remote fishing village of Baga on Friday, forcing residents to flee the town that also serves as a small trading centre on the shores of Lake Chad.

The village lies in Borno state, the home base of Boko Haram who are blamed for carrying out scores of attacks across northern and central Nigeria since 2009.


The fighting "killed dozens of people," said a state government official who refused to be named.

Borno state military spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Sagir Musa told AFP that media reports that some 180 people could have died in the clashes were "extensively inflated."

"There could have been some casualties, but it is unthinkable to say that 185 people died," Musa said.

Heavy damage was visible throughout the village, including signs that a massive fire had razed several homes and a market, according to an official who toured the area on Sunday with regional governor Kashim Shettima.

The official, who also requested anonymity, said local residents reported deaths among the insurgents, soldiers as well as civilians.

The Red Cross and the National Emergency Management Agency said their staff had not yet visited the area but both organisations planned to dispatch teams to the village on Monday.

Baga is more than 150 kilometres (93 miles) from the state capital Maiduguri, a precarious drive on poor roads in a region hit by waves of violence.

Boko Haram has used Maiduguri as a base for its insurgency, but scores of militants have reportedly fled to more remote corners of the state following a crackdown by security forces in the city.

Local residents told the governor's delegation that the clashes started when troops surrounded a mosque that was allegedly sheltering insurgents. (AFP)

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