A Cameroonian soldier looks at the Nigerian border through binoculars on November 12, 2014, in Amchide, northern Cameroon, after a city was raided by Boko Haram (AFP Photo/Reinnier Kaze) |
Maltam (Cameroon) (AFP) – Boko Haram
fighters kidnapped at least 60 people in a deadly attack in northern
Cameroon on Sunday, police said, in the latest cross-border raid by the
Nigeria-based Islamist group.
It came a day after neighbouring Chad
deployed troops to combat Boko Haram in Cameroon and Nigeria, as part of
a regional bid to combat the insurgents.
The militants “burst into two villages
in the Tourou area… They torched houses and left with around 60 people.
Most of them were women and children,” a police officer told AFP.
He said the attack had “left some
people dead” without giving an exact toll, adding that the Cameroon army
had “launched an operation” in the wake of the assault.
It is the largest abduction ever
carried out in Cameroon’s Far North region by Boko Haram and comes amid
mounting fears the group is expanding its operations into neighbouring
countries.
Cameroon already came under attack
last Monday when it said its troops repelled a raid by Boko Haram on a
northern military base, killing 143 militants in the process.
- Suicide bombing -
Also on Sunday, a suicide bomber
killed four people and wounded dozens in an attack on a bus station in
Potiskum, northeastern Nigeria, police and hospital sources told AFP.
“(The bomber) slowed his car twice…
some distance from the bus station, and he suddenly increased speed and
rammed into buses lined up waiting for passengers,” local trader Umar
Sani said.
A police officer said four bodies and 48 injured people had been taken from the scene.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility, but the town has often come under attack from Boko Haram militants.
Also in Nigeria, Chadian troops are
seeking to recapture the strategic city of Baga on the shores of Lake
Chad, which straddles the borders of Chad, Nigeria, Niger and Cameroon
and which fell to the Islamists early this month.
Many say the assault on Baga could be
Boko Haram’s deadliest yet. Satellite pictures released by Amnesty
International and Human Rights Watch showed widespread destruction with
around 3,700 buildings in Baga and nearby Doron Baga damaged or
destroyed.
Amnesty says as many as 2,000
civilians may have been massacred, but Nigeria’s army objected to the
“sensational” claims and said that the death toll in Baga was about 150.
Chad on Saturday sent troops, some 400
military vehicles and several attack helicopters to Cameroon and
Nigeria to aid in the fight against the Islamist militants.
“We will advance towards the enemy
tomorrow (Monday),” Chadian colonel Djerou Ibrahim, in charge of the
operation, told AFP in the northern Cameroonian town of Maltam.
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