PHOTO:
CAMEROON, Amchide : This photo taken on June 17, 2014 in the border town of
Amchide, northern Cameroon, shows police forces of the multi-purpose
intervention brigade holding a surveillance position, as part of a
reinforcement of its military action against Nigerian Islamist group Boko
Haram.
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Cameroon’s
army has killed at least 41 Islamist militants as it fought off a wave of
attacks along its border with Nigeria in an escalation in the conflict, the
government said.
The Information Minister, Issa Tchiroma, disclosed this in Yaoundé on Monday.
Tchiroma
said that the coordinated assaults on five towns and villages showed a change
in tactics by Nigerian Boko Haram fighters, who have focused on hit-and-run raids
on individual settlements in the past.
“Boko
Haram’s campaign to carve out an Islamist caliphate has spread from its
stronghold in Northeast Nigeria to neighbouring Cameroon.
“Raising fears for an already unstable region also threatened by Islamist militants in the Sahel,’’ he said.
“Raising fears for an already unstable region also threatened by Islamist militants in the Sahel,’’ he said.
He added
that Cameroon has sent thousands of soldiers to its Far North region to fight
off the militants and said it launched air attacks on the movement for the
first time on Sunday.
“Units of
the Boko Haram group attacked Makari, Amchide, Limani and Achigachia in a
change of strategy which consists of distracting Cameroonian troops on
different fronts.
“Making them more vulnerable in the face of the mobility and unpredictability of their attacks,’’ Tchiroma said.
“Making them more vulnerable in the face of the mobility and unpredictability of their attacks,’’ Tchiroma said.
He said
that no fewer than 34 militants were killed after the army laid siege to a base
used by the militants in Chogori and seven others, and one soldier was killed
near the town of Waza.
Army
spokesman, Lt.-Col. Didier Badjeck, told newsmen that the Islamists briefly
occupied an army camp in Achigachia after a fierce fight, but withdrew after
air attacks.
“All the militants had now pulled back into Nigeria,’’ Badjeck said.
Both
Tchiroma and Badjeck said it was too early to give full details of casualties.
Boko Haram has killed over 40 soldiers and recruited hundreds of youths during
raids in Cameroon’s Far North region this year.
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