Few days after suspected Boko Haram gunmen killed seven students and
two teachers in Nigeria’s north eastern city of Damaturu, Yobe state,
the militants have struck again in Maiduguri, Borno state, attacking
students in a private school.
This time, they killed nine students as they sat for their final exam, local people said Tuesday.
The
latest attack, in a region that is a stronghold of the Islamist rebel
group Boko Haram, happened on Monday in the Jajeri suburb of the city,
they said.
Mohammed
Saleh, a relative of one of the deceased students, said school
officials had told him that the attack happened soon after the
end-of-year exam had started.
“Nine of the students died instantly,” he said, blaming members of Boko Haram.
David
Buba, a student at the school who was on the premises when the attack
happened, told AFP he had lost a friend in the attack.
“I was within the school premises on Monday afternoon when I started hearing gunshots,” he said.
“I
initially thought it was outside the school but when I saw people
running, I was confused and hid somewhere in fear until 30 minutes later
when corpses of our students were brought out of the exam hall.”
A security force spokesman could not be reached to confirm the attack.
Overnight
Sunday to Monday, suspected Boko Haram gunmen opened fire on a
secondary school in Damaturu, in the neighbouring state of Yobe to the
west, killing seven students and two teachers.
Two of the attackers were also killed, said the army.
Boko
Haram, whose name roughly translates as “Western education is sin,” has
carried out multiple attacks on schools in violence-torn northeast
Nigeria.
The group has said it is fighting to create an Islamic state in the country’s mainly Muslim north.
In
May, the army launched a major offensive against the group in Nigeria’s
three northeastern states: Borno, Yobe and Adamawa, and imposed a state
of emergency.
In an audio message obtained by AFP on Tuesday, Abu
Zinnira, who claimed to speak for Boko Haram, accused the youth of
Maiduguri and Yobe of collaborating with the authorities.
“We
hereby declare an all-out war on you because you have formed an alliance
with the Nigerian military and police to fight our brethren,” he said.
Speaking
in Hausa, the most common language in northern Nigeria, he added: “We
call on any parent that values the life of his son to stop him from
exposing our members otherwise he is dead.”
A statement issued on
Monday by army spokesman Brigadier General Chris Olukolade praised the
initiative of some local people, “…particularly youths organised into
vigilante groups to join the efforts to fish out the terrorists within
their communities”.
At least 9,000 Nigerians, mainly women and
children, have fled the recent army operation to neighbouring countries,
mainly Niger and Cameroon, the UN refugee agency said Tuesday.
In
addition, a local official in the northeast of the country said some
19,000 wheat and rice farmers had been forced from their fields, raising
concerns over potential food shortages.
The Boko Haram insurgency has left some 3,600 people dead since 2009, according to Human Rights Watch.
That figure includes killings by the security services, who rights groups have accused of carrying out widespread abuses.
No comments:
Post a Comment