The Nigerian town of Bama remains under government control
after an assault by Boko Haram, the Borno state government and local vigilante
groups said on Wednesday, contradicting reports that the Islamist group had
seized much of it.
The attack on Bama began on Monday, and on Tuesday residents
and several security sources, including a soldier on the ground, said the insurgents
had overrun much of it.
Nigeria's military has remained silent since the attack
began. A defense spokesman did not respond to requests for comment. There was
no immediate comment from Boko Haram, which never communicates with the press
beyond releasing videos of its leader, Abubakar Shekau.
Fears that Maiduguri could be the next target prompted the
government to extend a curfew in place there to 7:00 p.m. (1800 GMT) until 6:00
a.m. - it previously started at 10:00 p.m.
The insurgents captured the remote farming town of Gwoza,
along the Cameroon border, during fighting last month. Shekau in a video
declared it a “Muslim territory” last week. That occurred two months after
Islamist militants in Iraq and Syria declared the area they had seized an
Islamic caliphate.
“The attack on Bama town... was very unfortunate, but I want
to reassure our people that government is on top of the situation,” Borno state
deputy governor Zanna Mustapha, who is also an opposition politician, said in a
statement. “Our security forces are engaging the insurgents in a fierce
battle.”
Local pro-government vigilantes also said the town remained
in the hands of Nigerian forces.
“Our gallant soldiers successfully repelled the insurgents
who attacked Bama, [which] has never been overrun or overtaken by the
insurgents even for a minute,” a spokesman for the youth vigilantes Jibrin
Gunda told journalists.
Defense Spokesman Major General Chris Olukolade has not
commented, although on his Twitter account he re-tweeted a comment by state
television that “Bama is not in the hands of terrorists, situation in the
region is being contained,” which the station sourced to the deputy governor.
The United Nations refugee agency (UNHCR) says 9,000 people
have been fled fighting in northeast Nigeria in the past 10 days over the
border to Cameroon. More than 700,000 people have been displaced externally and
internally by the conflict.
Shekau's forces have killed thousands since launching an
uprising in 2009 to revive a medieval Islamic caliphate in religiously mixed
Nigeria. They are by far the biggest security threat to Africa's biggest
economy.
VOA News
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