Nigeria vows to crush Boko Haram after 16 killed in attack
KANO: A female suicide bomber and Boko Haram gunmen killed 16 people in Nigeria as the commander of a new multinational force tasked with fighting the Islamists pledged on Friday to crush the insurgency “very soon”.
Major General Iliya Abbah’s appointment in an Abuja ceremony as chief of the 8,700-strong force came as a woman bomber on a tricycle killed six people in a busy market in Maiduguri, the largest city in Nigeria’s restive northeastern Borno state.
The militants also struck neighbouring Yobe state, killing at least 10 people including two women on Wednesday evening in a revenge attack against local vigilantes, a local official said on Friday.
The suicide attack was the latest in a wave of Boko Haram bombings — often by female bombers — targeting markets in Nigeria, Chad and Cameroon that have killed and wounded scores in the past month.
Boko Haram has kidnapped thousands of civilians, including women and children, with many either forced or indoctrinating into joining the extremists, official say.
“The attack (on the Gamboru) market happened around 6:30am as the grocers were arriving,” Babakura Kolo, a vigilante in Maiduguri, said.
“From accounts we gathered from people around, the woman arrived on a taxi tricycle, as every woman grocer does. She blew herself up as soon as the tricycle stopped in the midst of other tricycles dropping traders off,” Kolo said.
Another resident was at home when he heard the blast, and he rushed to the scene immediately afterwards. “The place was littered with victims and burning rickshaws,” he said.
Gamboru market is the second largest in Maiduguri, the capital of Borno state and birthplace of Boko Haram, which has killed at least 15,000 people since its bloody insurgency began in 2009.
The new multinational force, whose troops Abbah said would be deployed “any time from today”, is expected to be more efficient than the regional offensive launched in February.
The force will contain troops from Nigeria, Cameroon, Niger and Chad, with Benin also committed to help.
“I assure (you), by the will of God, that I will live (up) to expectations and we will see the end of this menace very soon,” Abbah said in Abuja.
However Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari has recently complained of a lack of resources, raising concerns over the force’s chances of defeating Boko Haram once and for all.
The Chadian army has gone ahead and waged a vast offensive of its own in the past fortnight, targeting Islamists holed up around Lake Chad and claiming to have killed “117 terrorists”.
Published in Dawn, August 1st, 2015
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