Nigeria’s military said it has launched air strikes on a Boko Haram
camp, killing several Islamists, near a northeastern college campus
where insurgents massacred 40 students at the weekend, a spokesman said
Thursday.
“We tracked the Boko Haram terrorists to their camp in
the forest outside Gujba,” military spokesman in Yobe state Lazarus Eli
said of the Tuesday operation.
“Fighter jets bombarded the camp while troops launched a ground offensive, which left several terrorists dead,” Eli added.
On
Sunday, heavily armed Boko Haram gunmen attacked an agricultural
college in Gujba, killing 40 students as they slept in their dorms.
Gujba is roughly 30 kilometres (18 miles) from Yobe’s capital of Damaturu.
“The whole camp was destroyed in the raid and we are on the trail of fleeing members of the terrorist group,” Eli said.
The
military has previously issued statements following major Boko Haram
attacks, boasting of successes which are often difficult to verify.
Eli said “15 suspected terrorists” have been arrested around Gujba.
The
weekend school massacre cast further doubt on the success of an ongoing
military campaign, launched in May, which is aimed at crushing the
four-year insurgency.
More than 100 people have been killed in a
spate of school attacks since June, while dozens of others have been
slaughtered in violence across the northeast, Boko Haram’s historic
stronghold.
The insurgents have said they are fighting to create
an Islamic state in Nigeria’s mainly Muslim north, but their demands
have repeatedly shifted.
According to an estimate made earlier
this year, the insurgency has cost more than 3,600 lives, including
killings by the security forces. The current figure is likely much
higher.
Nigeria is Africa’s most populous country and top oil
producer, roughly divided between the mainly Muslim north and a
predominately Christian south.
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