Camerounian
troops killed 39 Boko Haram fighters in clashes with the Islamists, who
were carrying out three raids on Cameroun’s territory, the defence
ministry said Sunday.
Friday’s fighting in the far north of
Cameroun near Nigeria also claimed four civilian lives, the ministry
said in a statement sent to AFP.
Boko Haram
rebels, who have been waging attacks in northern Nigeria and who
kidnapped more than 200 school girls there in April, frequently cross
into neighbouring Cameroun.
Their latest attack targeted the
village of Glawi, “killing four Nigerian refugees and wounding one
Camerounian, before being pushed back by defence forces which pursued
them until the borders,” the ministry said, adding that a dozen
militants were killed by troops.
Another two groups of Boko Haram
Islamists entered Cameroun at around the same time, but were
“immediately intercepted and neutralised by our defence forces who
destroyed three 4×4 vehicles equipped with machine guns, killing 27
assailants,” said the ministry statement.
The toll issued by the
ministry has not been confirmed by independent sources. There was also
no details on any casualties suffered by the army.
The Camerounian army regularly issues updates on the number of Boko Haram fighters it has killed.
Last week, it said it killed 107 Islamists during fighting that also saw eight Camerounian soldiers lose thier lives.
President
Paul Biya has vowed to “totally wipe out” the Islamist group, after 27
Chinese and Camerounian hostages kidnapped in May and July on Cameroun’s
territory by suspected Boko Haram Islamists were released.
Cameroun
shares a border of more than 2,000 kilometres (1,200 miles) with
Nigeria, where Boko Haram has been waging a bloody insurgency since 2009
in which 10,000 people have died.
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