continued to strike beyond their strongholds in neighbouring Nigeria, police and local sources said Wednesday.
The insurgents also shot dead
nine fishermen in a village near the shores of Lake Chad in northeastern
Nigeria, amid heightened violence region-wide since Nigerian President
Muhammadu Buhari's was sworn in in May.
More
than 800 people have been killed in just two months in a surge of Boko
Haram attacks, which began after Buhari took office on a pledge to
defeat the militants.
Cameroon, which is part of a regional force fighting the militants, has been the target of some of the deadly assaults.
The
latest raid took place before dawn on Tuesday in the village of
Chakamari in a region of Cameroon known as the Extreme North.
It
came as Guinea offered help in the regional fight against Boko Haram,
whose bloody insurgency in Nigeria has increasingly spread to
neighbouring states.
"Men
from Boko Haram attacked our neighbours in the village of Chakamari
overnight Monday-Tuesday. They killed eight people, two women and six
men," a member of a vigilante group in a neighbouring village told AFP
on Wednesday.
The vigilante, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the attackers torched many homes before making off with the hostages.
He said a total of 135 people had been abducted.
A police source confirmed the death toll and the number of those kidnapped.
Cameroon
has been hit in the areas of Fotokol and Maroua by five suicide
bombings in recent weeks, some of them carried out by women and girls.
Boko Haram's bloody insurgency has left more than 15,000 people dead since 2009.
The
fishermen killed near Lake Chad were headed for the fishing town of
Baga on Tuesday when the militants stopped their van, dragged them out
and shot them.
"They dashed into the road when
they heard us approaching. Our driver managed to turn back and headed to
Monguno," Grema Ari, who was in a second vehicle and survived, told AFP
on Wednesday.
- Nigerians deported -
Cameroon's
government spokesman told state radio that two women, aged 19 and 21,
were arrested last week in possession of handbags containing explosives.
"The
explosive charges used by the terrorists are military in origin,
apparently taken during Boko Haram attacks on military sites or taken
from countries involved in armed conflict," Communication Minister
Tchiroma Bakary said.
Yaounde
has announced it is sending 2,000 more soldiers to the Extreme North to
fight Boko Haram, where locals are feeling increasingly threatened by
the insurgents.
Meanwhile,
Nigerian authorities said Wednesday that more than 1,000 nationals had
returned home after being deported from northern Cameroon.
The
refugees had sought shelter in Cameroon from Boko Haram, but were
rounded up and sent home as Yaounde stepped up security measures to
prevent Boko Haram suicide attacks.
Last week, local sources in
Cameroon said Yaounde had deported more than 2,000 Nigerians living
illegally in the north of the country. But Nigerian officials put the number far higher, saying that around 12,000 people had already been expelled, with the number expected to rise to 17,000.
Also on Wednesday, Guinea's President Alpha Conde said his country was ready to help in the regional fight against the Islamist militants.
"We are ready to provide any assistance asked of us... in the fight against Boko Haram," Conde said on a visit to Niger's capital Niamey.
Meanwhile,
seven jihadists were killed and two soldiers wounded in clashes pitting
Boko Haram against Chadian troops on Lake Chad, a security source in
N'Djamena said.
A beefed-up task force has been set up to replace the current regional force and is due to go into action soon.
Source: AFP

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