Nigeria
MAIDUGURI Nigeria (Reuters) - At least 26 people were killed when suspected Islamist Boko Haram militants stormed a village in northeast Nigeria and a government warplane opened fire to repel the attackers, local residents and a security source said on Tuesday.
The warplane strafed Boko Haram
fighters fleeing in pick-up trucks after raiding Dille, near Lassa in the south
of Borno State, for several hours on Monday. The attackers fired on inhabitants
and burned homes and churches.
"I counted 26 corpses yesterday
evening," one of the residents, Dauda Illiya, told Reuters.
Most of the deaths occurred during the
raid but cannon fire from the government jet also killed at least six civilians
- four women and two children, residents said.
"The pilot was just spraying
bullets anywhere ... People were running here and there. Many people were
injured from the bullets," said a local man, Suleiman Haruna.
Nigeria's defense headquarters in Abuja did not respond to a
request for comment on the incident, but a security source in Borno State
confirmed the deployment of the military plane.
The residents and the security source said 20 militants were killed by local
vigilantes who fought back, but this could not be confirmed as witnesses said
the raiders carried off their dead in their trucks.
Nigeria's armed forces are facing a
fierce offensive in the northeast by the Islamist group Boko Haram, whose
marauding bands of fighters have stepped up attacks against towns and villages
after kidnapping more than 200 schoolgirls in April.
That abduction triggered an
international outcry and increased support from Western governments for
President Goodluck Jonathan's fight against Boko Haram, which has killed
thousands and abducted hundreds since launching an uprising in 2009.
Boko Haram, whose name means "Western education is sinful", says
it wants to set up an Islamic state in Nigeria, whose population is split
between Christians and Muslims.
Authorities and military experts fear
Boko Haram, which has claimed bomb attacks in recent months in the capital
Abuja and in the coastal commercial hub Lagos, is seeking to push its
insurgency into the more prosperous south. [ID:nL6N0PN09G]
BOMBING SUSPECT EXTRADITED
Nigeria's state security services said
on Tuesday that a Boko Haram suspect and national army deserter, Aminu Sadiq
Ogwuche, who was sought for alleged involvement in April 14 and May 1 bomb
attacks in the Abuja area that killed 94 people, had been extradited to Nigeria
from Sudan.
"Yes, he's with us", State Security spokewoman Marilyn Ogar told
Reuters. She said Ogwuche was arrested by the international police agency
Interpol in Sudan on a warrant from Nigeria.The suspected militants who on Monday attacked Dille, which is not far from the Cameroon border, were believed to have come from Boko Haram's Sambisa forest stronghold where at least some of the kidnapped girls are thought to be held.
On Monday, Jonathan promised that the missing 219 girls, snatched on April 14 from Chibok, also in Borno State, would soon return home, teenage Pakistani activist Malala Yousafzai said after meeting him. [ID:nL6N0PP439]
Malala, who became a global celebrity after surviving being shot in the head by the Taliban for campaigning for girls' education, was visiting Nigeria to support the international campaign for the release of the abducted Nigerian students.
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