Villagers living near Sambisa forest
in Borno State have reported seeing a large number of Boko Haram
militants leaving the wooded redoubt yesterday morning and moving
towards southern Borno.
A security source, who spoke to SaharaReporters, confirmed the account of the villagers. He said Nigeria’s intelligence agents were aware that members of the deadly sect, who had been holed up in a thick forest the size of Western Virginia in the United States, seemed to be relocating to the large swath of territory they have captured in recent daring attacks. Continue...
The sect members’ movement is most likely motivated by the
insurgents’ recent successes in capturing several major towns in
northern Borno, Yobe, and Adamawa States.
Eyewitnesses in the villages near Sambisa forest told SaharaReporters
that the insurgents had been moving their families and possibly many of
their abductees to safer grounds in towns captured in recent weeks.
A villager in Kirawa, a town on the Cameroonian side, also said he
had seen some suspected Boko Haram militants moving through Cameroonian
territory to Nigeria with large amounts of cargo in tightly secured
convoys.
The apparent relocation of the insurgents follows an embarrassing
incident two days ago when close to 500 Nigerian soldiers fled to
neighboring Cameroon in order to escape from a fierce contingent of Boko
Haram militants that attacked Gamboru-Ngala, a major town near the
border with Cameroon. With no resistance from the army, the militants
easily seized the town, and hoisted their flags at a police station and
the home of a former governor, Ali Modu Sheriff.
Cameroonian gendarmes took the absconding soldiers into custody and
disarmed them. A military source disclosed that the fleeing soldiers,
who ran away with civilians, left behind four armored personnel carriers
(APCs) and a huge cache of arms that the militants have taken.
The reported large-scale relocation of Boko Haram fighters has
implications for the neighboring country of Cameroon. Cameroonian
authorities believe that the abducted wife of Cameroon’s Vice Prime
Minister, Amadou Ali, remains in the custody of Boko Haram inside
Sambisa forest. The militants kidnapped Mrs. Ali in late July during the
sect’s raid of the town of Kolofata. A Cameroonian security official,
who asked not to be identified, disclosed that negotiations were
continuing with Boko Haram to secure their release of Mrs. Ali and other
Cameroonian abductees.
Meanwhile displaced persons from Gamboru-Ngala are trapped in Fotocol
a small town near Ngala unable to find food and shelter three days
after Boko Haram militants sacked their hometown and surrounding
villages. A heavy downpour yesterday has made it impossible for their
relatives and aid agencies in Cameroon to reach them.
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