Chadian
troops drove out Boko Haram militants from the town of Dikwa in
Nigeria, an army spokesman said on Monday, losing one soldier in the
battle.
“We have total control of the town,” said Colonel
Azem Bermandoua. He added that many Boko Haram fighters had also been
killed in the clashes on Monday in northeastern Nigeria, the Islamist
group's stronghold.
A Reuters reporter on the
scene said black and white Boko Haram flags still flew in a town
deserted of residents after several weeks of occupation.
The
recapture of Dikwa coincided with the release of a video by the terror
group purporting to show it beheading two men, its first online posting
using advanced graphics and editing techniques reminiscent of footage
from the Islamic State (IS).
The film, released on Monday,
showed militants standing behind the two men who were on their knees,
their hands tied behind their backs, with one man standing over them,
holding a knife.
One of the men was made to tell the camera
that they had been paid by authorities to spy on the militant group,
before the film moved to another scene showing their decapitated bodies.
It was not possible to confirm the film’s authenticity or date,
reported Reuters.
The footage will stoke concerns that Boko
Haram, which evolved out of a clerical movement focused on northeast
Nigeria, is expanding its scope and seeking inspiration from global
militant networks including al Qaeda and IS.
The terrorists
who have killed thousands and kidnapped hundreds in their bid to carve
out an Islamist state in northeastern Nigeria, have in recent months
stepped up cross-border raids into Cameroun, Chad and Niger.
President Goodluck Jonathan had said Boko Haram is allied to both al
Qaeda and its offshoot IS, though that has not been confirmed by the
group itself.
Credit: ThisDay
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