Boko
Haram fighters on Sunday waged attacks on a barracks in Yobe State and a
southeastern border town in Niger Republic, where a blast killed at
least one person and left 10 injured, witnesses and hospital sources
said.
The Islamist militants launched their assault around
the town of Diffa in Niger before dawn, two days after launching its
first major attack on Friday in the area bordering Nigeria, witnesses
quoted by AFP said.
The cause of the deadly
blast in Diffa was not immediately known, with some sources describing
it as a suicide attack while others referred to it as a bomb or a mortar
shell.
Similarly members of the terror group were reported to have launched an attack on a military barracks in Gaida, Yobe State.
Although details on the barracks onslaught were sketchy at press time
yesterday, sources said they could hear the heavy exchange of gunfire
between the terrorists and Nigerian soldiers attempting to defend the
military facility.
However, in a bid to stem the attacks in
North-eastern Nigeria and neighbouring countries, Nigeria, Chad, Niger,
Cameroun and Benin Republic at the weekend pledged to deploy 8,700
troops, police and civilians as part of a regional effort to fight Boko
Haram terrorists.
“The representatives of Benin, Cameroun,
Niger, Nigeria and Chad have announced contributions totalling 8,700
military personnel, police and civilians,” the countries said in a
statement after a meeting in Cameroun's capital, Yaounde.
The
announcement came out of a three-day summit focused on organising the
force that will battle the Islamist militants, who are engaged in a
worsening six-year insurgency centred in Northeastern Nigeria.
Credit: Senator Iroegbu/ThisDay

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