Boko Haram gunmen have torched almost an entire
village near the northeast Nigerian town of Chibok from where over 200
schoolgirls were kidnapped, a resident who fled and a local elder said
Tuesday.
The raid in Takulashi village happened on Sunday and saw the
Islamists loot food supplies, two days after fighters stole more than 200
cattle from the same location.
Recent months have seen a reduction in such
hit-and-run raids in rural northeast Nigeria, in an indication the rebels’
ability to strike has been reduced by an army counter-offensive. But
sporadic raids still occur and there is concern about an increase in suicide
and bomb attacks in urban centres.
A group of insurgents on bicycles and on foot invaded
the farming and herding community at about 6:00 am (0500 GMT) on Sunday,
shooting indiscriminately and setting fire to homes. “They burnt more than
100 homes in the village. Only five houses were spared the inferno,” said a
resident who gave his name as David, after fleeing to the nearby town of Askira
Uba.
The attackers loaded food supplies onto four vehicles
they took from the village and burnt four more they were unable to take with
them. The rest of the supplies were set on fire. “We will have to wait
till everybody is back to know if there were any fatalities in the attack,”
Ayuba Chibok, a community leader in Chibok, told AFP.
“We are making contacts with the residents who fled to
locations where there is a phone network. “We thought the worst had
happened after Boko Haram rustled over 200 cattle in the village on
Friday.” In April last year 12 people were killed when gunmen attacked
Takulashi in the wake of the abduction of 276 schoolgirls from their school in
Chibok by Boko Haram.
Fifty-seven girls escaped soon afterwards but nothing
has been seen or heard from the remaining 219 in captivity since a video in May
2014.
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