Some jihadists suspected to be militants
of the notorious Islamic sect Boko Haram killed five Nigerian soldiers
and injured five others in a raid on a military post in the
violence-torn northeast.
Speaking on the incident on Tuesday, a top military source disclosed that “our men were outgunned and outnumbered.”
“We lost five men in the fight. Five
more were injured,” the military officer who sought anonymity because he
was not authorised to speak about the incident said in Maiduguri, the
capital of Borno State.
Mustapha Karimbe, a civilian assisting
the military, said the jihadists took military vehicles and burned three
armoured cars along with makeshift sheds at the checkpoint.
“The terrorists attacked the soldiers… and remained in the village for three hours before they withdrew,” said Karimbe.
This was the second attack on the same military checkpoint in under a month.
Late last month, jihadists dressed in
Nigerian military uniforms attacked the checkpoint and forced soldiers
to withdraw before looting food and medical supplies from the village.
It is understood that dozens of fighters
loyal to the Boko Haram faction headed by Abu Musab Al-Barnawi on
Monday night stormed a checkpoint near Sabon Garin Kimba village about
140 kilometres (90 miles) from Maiduguri, the birthplace of Boko Haram.
Boko Haram, in its attempt to establish
an Islamic caliphate in Northern Nigeria, has killed over 20,000 people
with more than two million others displaced during a seven-year
insurgency.
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