The town is
now under the control of Nigerian forces after the operation led by
Cameroon special forces from Feb. 11 to Feb. 14, Cameroon's
communication minister Issa Tchiroma Bakary said late Monday.
Cameroon
forces freed about 100 people being held by the insurgents, including
Cameroonians and Nigerians, he said. Two members of Cameroon's military
were killed, he said. The two, including a senior commander, were
reported killed after their convoy hit a vehicle Sunday.
"The
town of Goshi in Nigeria was formally identified as one of the Boko
Haram posts, hosting factories for the manufacturing of bombs and
mines," Bakary said. He added that the town was also used to house
teenagers who are used as human bombs during suicide attacks.
Bakary
said 162 Boko Haram fighters were killed, four mine factories
dismantled, and special forces seized at least five readied mines,
hundreds of explosive holders, suicide vests and triggers. A previously
identified training center, along with two vehicles were also set on
fire, he said.
The operation
took place under the banner of the multinational task force, and with
intelligence and operational coordination with Nigerian forces, he said.
In
its six-year insurgency, Boko Haram has killed more than 20,000 people
and displaced 2.5 million in the region, according to the United Nations
and Amnesty International.
Attacks
across Nigeria's borders increased by the extremists last year in
countries such as Cameroon who are contributing to a multinational force
to combat Boko Haram.
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