Nigeria sect clashes kill at least 68 – officials

KANO, Nigeria (Reuters) – Gun battles between Nigerian security forces and an Islamist sect killed at least 68 people in two days of fighting in northern Nigeria, authorities and hospital sources said yesterday.

Militant group Boko Haram, which wants to impose Islamic sharia law across the country split roughly equally between Christians and Muslims, has been blamed for scores of shootings and bombings in Nigeria’s remote, semi-arid northeast, including a spate of attacks in the past few weeks.

Nigeria’s army killed more than 50 members of the sect during fighting on Thursday and Friday in the northeastern city of Damaturu, the force’s chief of staff Lieutenant General Azubuike Ihejirika said in comments published in local media.

Three soldiers also died, he added.

“There was a major encounter with Boko Haram in Damaturu and we overran their stronghold and their ammunition site,” Ihejirika said.

“They came with sophisticated and heavy weaponry including GPMGs (machine guns) and bombs but our trained soldiers subdued them.”

Hospital sources in Damaturu said they had counted 50 bodies so far, but most of the dead were civilians.

“So far 50 bodies have been deposited at the mortuary by the military and police operatives,” a hospital worker told Reuters by telephone. “They were … seven policemen, two soldiers and 41 civilians.”

In a separate incident in the city on Friday, suspected sect members opened fire on a group of policemen shortly after prayers, killing four, police said.

Residents said Damaturu was quiet yesterday, but surveyed by a heavy military and police presence.

“Everywhere is so tense here. There’s nobody on the street except security men. The bodies of those killed are being removed from the mortuary … Our town is virtually a ghost town,” Usman Mamman, a Damaturu resident, said by telephone.

At least 11 people were killed in another shootout in the remote northeastern city of Maiduguri, Boko Haram’s heartland on the threshold of the Sahara and bordering Chad, Niger and Cameroon, on Thursday, a morgue official said.

Clashes between security forces and the sect, whose name roughly translates as “Western education is forbidden”, have become increasingly frequent in the past couple of weeks, as the north’s simmering conflict escalates.

There was no immediate comment from Boko Haram, which rarely makes public statements.