The
Federal Government of Nigeria has sealed its northern border with
Cameroon in an effort to shut out terrorists using its neighbour as a
launchpad for attacks.
The closure extends from Borno State,
by Lake Chad, to the southern end of Adamawa State, around halfway
along Nigeria’s 1,500-mile border with Cameroon.
A statement
issued by the Commandant 23 Armoured Brigade, Brigadier-General Rogers
Ibe Nicholas said that the closure is meant to effectively curtail the
activities of the insurgents.
Borno and Adamawa
states are covered by a State of Emergency that President Goodluck
Jonathan declared last May as part of an offensive meant to crush the
Boko Haram sect.
“To effectively curtail the activities of the
insurgents, the Cameroon border in the northeast has been closed
indefinitely,” Brigadier-General Rogers Ibe Nicholas said in a
statement.
The Islamists, whose struggle for an Islamic state in
northern Nigeria has killed thousands and made them the biggest threat
to security in Africa’s top oil producer, are currently based in the
hilly Gwoza area next to Cameroon.
Nigerian security officials say they often launch deadly attacks then flee over the border to avoid being pursued.
They
killed more than 200 people in two attacks last week on villages,
prompting renewed criticisms that military action has failed to
neutralize them.
When will this end
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