Nigeria said on Wednesday that 36 towns had been retaken from Boko
Haram since the start of a four-nation military offensive,
voicing hope
that the operation could lead to the group’s “total defeat”.
National
security spokesman Mike Omeri said four towns had fallen since last
Friday, including three in Borno state and Buni Yadi, in neighbouring
Yobe, where the insurgents slaughtered more than 40 students in February
last year before seizing it in August.
Crucial “co-operations and
alliances” have led to victories over the Islamist rebels, he said,
thanking neighbouring Cameroon, Chad and Niger for cutting off “the
supply lines of the terrorists”.
“It is hoped that the unfolding
regional cooperation will hasten the total defeat and extermination of
Boko Haram in Nigeria and the sub-region,” he added.
Since the
unprecedented joint offensive was launched last month, Nigeria has
maintained that its troops were controlling operations.
But
witnesses, experts and claims by other militaries indicate that Chadian
troops have made a particularly large contribution, advancing deep into
Nigerian territory and flushing Boko Haram fighters out of several parts
of Borno state.
Nigeria delayed its February 14 general election
to March 28 after security chiefs said they needed more time to weaken
the militants.
The reported successes, which have not all been
independently verified, may allow more people to vote across Boko
Haram’s northeast stronghold.
As a result, President Goodluck
Jonathan’s re-election chances could improve if voters feel he has
finally taken decisive action against the rebels.
The conflict has
killed more than 13,000 people since 2009, and critics have accused
Jonathan and military top brass of failing to contain the violence.
The
fighting has displaced more than 1.5 million people in Nigeria but
Omeri claimed that some were “now returning to their homesteads to
settle back into normal life”.
There was however no independent
confirmation of significant numbers of displaced people returning home
and Nigeria’s claims about the conflict have in the past not been
consistent with reports from the ground.
The International
Committee for the Red Cross on Tuesday warned of a “full blown
humanitarian crisis” in the Lake Chad region, where Nigeria meets Niger,
Chad and Cameroon.
Source:PM News

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