in an effort to finally defeat their six-year-old insurgency, two military sources said.
Armies from Nigeria and neighbors Chad, Niger and Cameroon
have in the past two months launched a concerted push to try to crush
the insurgents, who have killed thousands and kidnapped hundreds in
their battle to establish an Islamic state.
The Sambisa forest in northeast Nigeria, a vast former
colonial game reserve, is about 100 km (60 miles) from the village of
Chibok from where Boko Haram abducted more than 200 secondary school
girls a year ago. Intelligence officials had believed that this was
where they were being held, although U.S. reconnaissance drones have
failed to find them.
U.N. Special Representative for
West Africa Mohamed Ibn Chambas said this month that Boko Haram
militants seeking shelter in the Sambisa Forest may be using some of the
captured girls as human shields.A spokesman for the military was not immediately available for comment.
An official in the Chadian army said Chadian and
Cameroonian troops were ready to attack Sambisa, which lies near the
Cameroon border, from the other side and would move in soon.
Chadian troops were assembling in Mora, northern Cameroon,
ahead of the joint operation, a Cameroonian army official said.
The militants
controlled an area the size of Belgium at the start of the year, but
have since lost much of that ground.
Yet they remain a deadly threat to civilians, as
illustrated on Friday when they slit the throats of 12 people in
northeast Nigeria as the army was trying to evacuate the area around the
former Boko Haram headquarters of Gwoza.
Failure to crush Boko Haram or protect civilians was one
reason President Goodluck Jonathan lost an election on March 28 to
Muhammadu Buhari, who has pledged to spare no effort in battling the
militants after he is sworn in on May 29.
Buhari also said he would do everything possible to rescue the Chibok girls, but could not promise to find them.
Source:Reuters
No comments:
Post a Comment