Boko
Haram militants have seized Chibok, a town in Borno State, where nearly
300 schoolgirls were abducted by the same group on April 14.
Residents of Chibok said militants attacked and took control of the Chibok Local Government Area Thursday night.
It is not clear whether any resident was killed.
The
extremist group, Boko Haram, has seized several towns lately in Borno
and Adamawa State, driving out government soldiers and other security
operatives and confiscating their arms.
On Thursday, the Adamawa
State governor, Bala Ngilari, said local vigilante and hunters, backed
by the military, reclaimed Mubi, the second most important town in
Adamawa, nearly two weeks after the town fell to the insurgents.
Chibok
became the centre of international attention in April after Boko Haram
fighters stormed the town and took away nearly 300 female students from a
government secondary school.
Majority of the girls remain in captivity more than six months after. About 57 either escaped or were released.
A
recent claim by the Nigerian government that a ceasefire had been
agreed with Boko Haram and that the girls will be returned to their
families, turned out false.
Credit: Premium Times
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