About 480 government soldiers, who
had previously fled into Cameroon after heavy fighting with Boko Haram
insurgents are currently being repatriated to Nigeria by Cameroonian
Authorities. As previously reported by an AP news article,
civilians fleeing into Cameroon gave accounts of being joined by
Nigerian soldiers who were retreating from heavy fighting with Boko
Haram insurgents in the border town of Gamboru. See video after cut...
The Nigerian army had previously
referred to the unscheduled arrival of 480 Nigerian troops into
Cameroonian soil as a “tactical maneuver”. A SaharaReporters source has revealed that’s the troops re entered Nigeria on a longer route through Adamawa state, rather than Borno state, after being transported in a long convoy under tight security escort.
The source said a long convoy transporting the troops entered Nigeria
through a longer route from Adamawa state, rather than Borno state, and
will soon join their units to continue operations against the Boko
Haram militant fighters.
A security source based in the Maidugiri had previously informed
SaharaReporters that Boko Haram sought to control the expansive areas of
the Gamboru-Ngala for the strategic location and vibrant commercial
infrastructure conducive for establishment of an Islamic caliphate.
Despite Nigeria’s government’s imposition of a State of Emergency in
the Northeatern state of Borno late last year, Boko Haram has wreaked
havoc in many areas of the region with hi-profile activities including
successfully capturing the Gwoza Training camp of the Nigeria Police
Mobile Force (PMF) last week and several army barracks and police
installations, and towns.
Boko Haram has also successfully conducted cross border raids into
neighboring Cameroon including the highly publicized kidnapping of the
wife of Cameroon’s Vice Prime Minister Vice Prime Minister Amadou Ali in
Kolofata in late July.
The group has increasingly developed a violent nature in its
operations since the killing of its founding leader, Mohammed Younus, in
2009.
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