KANO, Nigeria — Militants aligned with Daesh (the so-called IS) have killed five security personnel, including two soldiers, in three separate attacks in northeast Nigeria"s Borno state, sources said on Wednesday. In the first attack on Monday, fighters from Daesh West Africa (ISWAP) militant group aboard trucks attacked a military post in Tungushe village near the state capital Maiduguri, killing a soldier and injuring another, a military officer said. "The terrorists attacked around 6:00 pm (1700 GMT), leading to a gun battle in which a soldier was killed and another one was injured," said the officer, who asked not to be identified. He said two insurgents were killed in the incident while a gun truck was recovered along with weapons. The militants withdrew and attacked troops in nearby Gajiganna, where they killed a second soldier and seized a gun truck, according to anti-militant militiaman Ibrahim Liman. Tungushe, which lies 22 km (13 miles) from Maiduguri, has been repeatedly targeted by Daesh and fighters from the rival Boko Haram faction, attacking troops and raiding the village for food and livestock. Around the same time on Monday, insurgents on motorcycles and in four trucks fitted with machine guns stormed into the town of Rann near the border with Cameroon, attacking troops and militia positions. "We lost three of our colleagues in the Rann incident," Liman said. "Our consolation is that several terrorists were killed in the fight, including their commander, and one of their trucks was recovered," he said. Rann is some 175 km northeast of Maiduguri, where some 35,000 people displaced by the militant violence are sheltering. The town has also come under repeated attack by Daesh and Boko Haram militants. On Tuesday, Daesh issued a statement claiming responsibility for three attacks, including the ones in Tungushe and Rann, resulting in the "killing and wounding" of several troops and the burning of 20 public buildings. The militants have recently stepped up deadly assaults in the restive northeast. On Sunday, militants killed at least 30 people in an overnight raid on Auno village along the highway leading to Maiduguri where travelers had stopped to comply with a nighttime curfew. The decade-long militant uprising has killed 36,000 people and displaced around two million from their homes in northeast Nigeria. The conflict has spread to neighboring Niger, Chad and Cameroon, prompting a regional military coalition to fight the insurgents. — AFP
مشاركة :