Boko Haram militants have been amassing in the northeast Nigeria town
of Gwoza, believed to be the group’s headquarters, killing
residents
who were unable to flee, a senator and witnesses said Thursday.
A
female resident who fled Gwoza on Tuesday and requested anonymity said
the insurgents rounded up elderly men who were studying the Koran
outside the home of a local cleric.
The men were later executed in front of their wives, the witness told AFP from Yola, capital of neighbouring Adamawa state.
“The
Boko Haram men brought out brand new guns from cartons, tested them and
shot dead all the men who they forced to lie face down,” she said.
Some of these details were supported by area Senator Ali Ndume, who also confirmed the large build-up of insurgents in Gwoza.
“Boko
Haram insurgents have in recent days been converging in Gwoza where
they killed many male residents and chased women and children out of the
town,” said Ndume.
The group’s leader Abubakar Shekau proclaimed
Gwoza part of a caliphate and reclaiming the town that was captured last
June would be a huge prize for Nigeria’s military.
Nigeria,
Cameroon, Chad and Niger have since last month been waging an
unprecedented joint offensive against the insurgents, claiming the
recapture of several key towns and villages previously under Islamist
control.
Ndume speculated that the Islamists were preparing to
defend the symbolically important town before an expected military
advance, possibly by Chadian troops who are operating in the area with
Nigeria’s permission.
The motive for the rebel build-up in Gwoza
could not be independently confirmed but witnesses said a large number
of residents had also been killed in recent days.
The current population of Gwoza is hard to estimate.
Many
people in the town on the Cameroon border fled amid the rebel takeover
in June but many others — including those too old or sick to run —
stayed behind.
There were also indications that Boko Haram tried
to reassure people that it was safe to stay in the town and live under
the so-called caliphate.
Experts say Chad’s well-trained army has
offered a huge boost to Nigeria in recent weeks as both nations have
boasted of major successes against the insurgents.
Chadian
President Idriss Deby on Wednesday claimed he knew where Shekau was and
called on him to surrender while vowing to “wipe out” the Islamists.
Nigeria
is under intense pressure to show progress against Boko Haram ahead of
March 28 elections, which had been slated for February but were
postponed by six weeks to allow the military more time to pacify the
northeast.
Source:PM News
No comments:
Post a Comment