Boko Haram slaughtered hundreds in four north-east Nigerian villages, witnesses say
Maiduguri: Hundreds of people may have been killed in a suspected Boko
Haram attack on four villages in north-east Nigeria, a local politician and
residents say.
Gunmen in military uniform struck
Goshe, Attagara, Agapalwa and Aganjara in the Gwoza district of Borno state
late on Tuesday, razing homes, churches and mosques and killing residents who
tried to flee the violence.
Some community leaders put the death
toll in the attacks as high as 400 to 500, although there was no independent
verification of the claim because of poor communications and difficulties by
the emergency services in accessing the area.
If confirmed, the attack would be
one of the deadliest in the Islamists' five-year insurgency and top the more
than 300 who were killed on May 5 when militant fighters laid siege to the
nearby town of Gamboru Ngala.
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"The killings are massive but
nobody can give a toll for now because nobody has been able to go to that place
because the insurgents are still there. They have taken over the whole
area," politician Peter Biye said on Thursday.
"There are bodies littered over
the whole area and people have fled," added Biye, who represents Gwoza in
Nigeria's lower chamber of parliament the House of Representatives.
Reports from the remote region near
the border with Cameroon said that the insurgents continued their attack
throughout Wednesday, stealing livestock and food and burning property.
"Hundreds of dead bodies are
lying there ... because there is nobody that will bury them," said one
community leader in Attagara, who requested anonymity.
The community leader said the area
was facing a grave "humanitarian crisis" while others called for
relief agencies to be allowed in to enable the dead to be buried.
source: morning herald
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