Nigeria fighter jets bomb Town Occupied by Boko Haram
Nigerian fighter jets have bombed the northeast town of Malam Fatori, controlled by Boko Haram Islamists, the military said Thursday.
Witnesses and some media reports
said troops and airforce planes from neighbouring Chad were involved in
the operation on Nigerian soil but Abuja neither confirmed nor denied
the claim.
There was no initial word on casualties or whether Boko Haram fighters had fled the area.
"Malam
Fatori is within the area of operation covered by the Multinational
Joint Task Force (MNJTF) of which Chad has always been a part," defence
spokesman Chris Olukolade told AFP in a text message.
"The
Nigerian airforce has also been conducting (an) air mission there for
two days now," he added. "It is all part of the ongoing efforts against
terrorism."
The MNJTF was set
up more than a decade ago to combat smuggling in the remote region but
as the Nigerian Islamist insurgency in the area intensified, the mandate
of the force changed.
Residents
in the town of Bosso, which lies next to Malam Fatori but across the
border in Niger, said the bombardment began early on Wednesday and
lasted for several hours.
"At
around 8:00 am (0700 GMT) we started seeing three military jets
encircling Malam Fatori and soon after (they) began dropping bombs,"
said Idrissa Ari, a Bosso resident.
Reaching locals inside Malam
Fatori is difficult given the collapse of the mobile phone network on
the Nigerian side of the border.
The authorities in N'Djamena did not respond to requests seeking comment on their alleged involvement in the operation.
The
Boko Haram uprising has become a regional crisis, with the four
directly affected countries -- Cameroon, Chad, Niger and Nigeria --
agreeing to boost cooperation to contain the threat.
The
African Union's annual summit in the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa is
this week expected to focus heavily on the threat from Boko Haram.
AU chief Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma has called the insurgency "a threat to the whole continent".
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