Boko Haram controls territories in the Northeast.
Boko Haram
Islamists are still holding on to some territories in Nigeria’s troubled
northeast, state governors from the region said yesterday, after the military
claimed a series of major victories against the Islamists.
Borno and
Yobe governors told a monthly national economic council meeting in Abuja that
the rebel group — whose insurgency has claimed more than 15,000 lives since
2009 — still controlled five municipalities within their states.
“On Boko
Haram issues, governors of Yobe and Borno raised the alarm of five local
government areas of the two states still being in possession of the
insurgents,” an official document made available to reporters after the meeting
said.
Borno, Yobe
and Adamawa states in the northeast have suffered the brunt of the Boko Haram
insurgency.
A regional
military coalition of Nigeria, Niger, Chad and Cameroon has claimed a series of
major victories against Boko Haram since launching sweeping offensives against
the jihadists in February.
But the
Islamist fighters, who recently pledged allegiance to the Islamic State
extremists who have captured swathes of Iraq and Syria, have been pushing back.
The Borno
and Yobe governors called for an “increase in military deployment and provision
of sophisticated military equipment in those areas”, the three-page document
said.
”Insurgents
are still hiding in the Sambisa forest,” it added.
It is widely
believed that many of the more than 200 school girls kidnapped from their
school in Chibok, Borno state, by Boko Haram jihadists in April last year are
being held in the sprawling forest.
Gunmen
killed eight people in a raid on a village in Borno state on Wednesday, in the
latest violence blamed on the Islamists, a local resident and a vigilante said.
The attack
was unleashed the same day as twin suicide bombings in Cameroon and a series of
blasts at two bus stations in Nigeria that left at least 50 dead.
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