MAIDUGURI: Boko Haram kidnapped on Sunday at least 185 people, including women and children, in northeast Nigeria, the latest mass abduction in the restive region, officials and witnesses said on Thursday.

The attack, carried out by well-armed Islamist extremists in the town of Gumsuri, also killed 32 people. It recalled the April kidnappings in Chibok, where more than 200 girls were taken from a school.

President Goodluck Jonathan, who is standing for re-election in February 14 polls, had pledged that the Chibok attack would mark the beginning of the end of terrorism in Nigeria, but violence has escalated since then.

The Islamists have carried out a series of abductions this year, boosting their supply of child fighters, porters and young women who have reportedly been used as sex slaves.


Fifty-four soldiers sentenced to death for mutiny after refusing to deploy for operation against Boko Haram


Boko Haram has not claimed the Gumsuri attack, but multiple sources in the village blamed the extremists whose five-year uprising has killed more than 13,000 people and forced more than 1.5 million others from their homes.

Northeast Nigeria has been the epicentre of the conflict, but unrest has also spread into neighbouring Cameroon, where the military claimed to have killed 116 insurgents while repelling a Wednesday attack on an army base in the border town of Amchide.

A convoy of gunmen stormed Gumsuri in Borno state on Sunday, throwing petrol bombs into buildings and leaving much of the village destroyed, two local officials and a witness said.

The officials, who put the death toll at 32, said the local government established the number of those abducted by contacting families, ward heads and clerics.

A vigilante leader based in the Borno state capital Maiduguri, Usman Kakani, said that fighters who were in Gumsuri during the attack provided a figure of 191 abducted, including women, girls and boys.

Gumsuri is roughly 70 kilometres south of Maiduguri and falls on the road that leads to Chibok.

Details of the Gumsuri attack took four days to emerge because the mobile phone network in the region has completely collapsed and many roads are impassable.

Those who fled the village said it was too dangerous to head directly to Maiduguri. Instead, they travelled several hundred kilometres in the opposite direction to connect with the main road that leads to the state capital.

Mukhtar Buba, a resident who fled to Maiduguri, also confirmed that women and children were taken. “After killing our youths, the insurgents have taken away our wives and daughters,” he said.

The military and police were not immediately available to comment.

Witnesses said the hostages were carted away on trucks towards the Sambisa Forest, a notorious rebel stronghold, where the Chibok girls were also reportedly taken before being divided into smaller groups.

Vigilantes, who have the military’s backing, had defended Gumsuri against waves of previous Islamist attacks but were ultimately overpowered on Sunday, local officials said.

The military has left much of the front-line fighting to vigilantes and hunters who have inferior weapons and almost no training.

An army court martial on Wednesday sentenced 54 soldiers to death for mutiny after they refused to deploy for an operation against Boko Haram, blaming a lack of weapons.

The case underscored the struggles the military has faced in challenging the rebels, with soldiers on the ground claiming they have been used as cannon fodder in battles against militants armed with rocket propelled grenades and heavy artillery.

Published in Dawn, December 19th, 2014

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