Boko Haram militants yesterday attempted to blow up a bridge on the
border with Cameroon after overrunning a town and sending residents and
soldiers fleeing, three children were injured, police and residents
said.A Cameroon police officer stationed in the far north town of
Fotokol told AFP that the terrorists tried to destroy the bridge, which
serves as the border crossing with Gamboru Ngala in Nigeria.
Boko Haram stormed Gamboru Ngala early on Monday and by evening, had
taken over the police station, a military barracks and vocational
training centre, where they had based themselves, the residents said.
Flying shrapnel from the Cameroon side of the border detonated
explosives, possibly injured the three children, they added.
Meanwhile, soldiers, who fled into neighbouring Cameroon during a
clash with a large number of Boko Haram militants on Monday, handed over
their weapons to Cameroonian authorities and to Nigeria yesterday, the
Defence Headquarters said. They spent the evening at a Fotokol Customs
post.
Boko Haram has in recent weeks switched tactics from hit-and-run
attacks to attempting to seize and hold territory and have proclaimed
one captured town, Gwoza, as part of an “Islamic caliphate”.
Assessing how much territory the militants now hold is impossible,
but residents have said the Islamists now control at least one town in
Yobe State, Buni Yadi as well as Gwoza and Gamboru Ngala in neighbouring
Borno State.
Basuma Muhammed, a resident of Gamboru-Ngala, a town neighbouring
Cameroon where the clash took place on Monday, said soldiers joined
hundreds of civilians who fled into Cameroon. Cameroon Army spokesman
Didier Badjek, in an interview with the BBC, put the number of Nigerian
soldiers who fled across the border at 480.
In a statement, the Defence Headquarters said the soldiers were on
their way back to Nigeria after following protocol by handing over
“their weapons in order to assure the friendly country that they were
not on a hostile mission.”
Initially, the soldiers in the town were able to repel an attack by
Boko Haram, killing many of the fighters, Muhammed said. “But hours
after the attack, a bigger number of the Boko Haram gunmen arrived from
the other side of the town and engaged the soldiers who could not stand
their superior force and had to join us in running into Cameroon.”
The Defence Headquarters statement said the Nigerian soldiers had
performed a “tactical maneuvre” when they found themselves in Cameroon.
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