Boko Haram lock up church, spray worshippers with bullets

Abubakar Shekau

Abubakar Shekau: Boko Haram leader; his men keep killing villagers

Chilling details of how Boko Haram gunmen attacked three villages Sunday in Nigeria’s Borno State are emerging.

In Kautikiri village, the gunmen, in a Rwanda-style genocide, locked up worshippers in the church and sprayed it with bullets, according to survivors.

Samuel Chibok, a survivor of the attack here, about five km from where the girls were snatched, said that around 20 men in a Toyota pick-up truck and motorcycles rolled into the village. They sprayed it with bullets, focusing much of their fire power on panicked worshippers in a local church.

Abubakar Shekau: Boko Haram leader; his men keep killing villagers
Abubakar Shekau: Boko Haram leader; his men keep killing villagers

“Initially I thought they were military but when I came out, they were firing at people. I saw people fleeing and they burned our houses,” he said, adding that some people had died in the attack, including two of his relatives.

“Smoke was billowing from our town as I left.”

A local pro-government vigilante, who declined to be named, said residents had now recovered 15 bodies from the village.

The attackers on Sunday made simultaneous strikes on three villages in the Chibok community, in Borno state.

Another attack on Kwada, eight km (five miles) from Chibok village, left dozens of people dead, a security source operating in the area said, although the precise toll was not yet clear.

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A senior advisor to Borno state governor Kassim Shettima, who declined to be named because he was not authorised to speak, said there had also been a third attack on Nguragida, his home village which he visited on Sunday. Nine bodies had been recovered from that attack, he said.

Violence in Nigeria’s northeast has been relentless in the past year and has gained in intensity since April, when more than 200 schoolgirls were snatched by Boko Haram rebels from Chibok. Efforts to free them, which have attracted Western support, have so far not succeeded.

In a separate assault on Friday evening insurgents killed seven soldiers in the village of Goniri, in Yobe state, a security source and witnesses said.

The Boko Haram fighters arrived in four armoured personel carriers and 11 Hilux trucks mounted with anti-aircraft guns, said a security source and a witness who gave his name only as Hamisu.

“They were all dressed in full military but they did not direct their onslaught on the civilian population,” Hamisu said by telephone.

An explosion on Friday night in a brothel in the northeastern Nigerian city of Bauchi killed 11 people and wounded 28, police said on Saturday. This attack was also believed to be the work of Boko Haram.

A military operation in the northeast has so far failed to quell the rebellion and has triggered reprisal attacks that are increasingly targeting civilians, after they formed vigilante groups to try to help the government flush out the militants.

But their tactics – often striking then fleeing over the border into Cameroon – have repeatedly proved devastating. They are well armed and funded by a lucrative kidnapping operation.

.Reported by Reuters

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