Chadian aircraft struck Boko Haram positions in the Nigerian border
town of Gamboru for a second straight day on Sunday, an AFP journalist
in a neighbouring town said.
Two military choppers pounded targets
in Gamboru for about two hours, setting off loud explosions and sending
thick clouds of smoke into the sky, the journalist said from the town
of Fotokol about 500 metres (yards) away.
The town in far northeastern Nigeria, on the border with Cameroon, was already strafed by two Chadian fighter jets on Saturday.
Boko
Haram overran Gamboru several months ago as part of its campaign to
seize territory in the region and create an Islamic state.
The
uprising has become a regional crisis. In January, Chad sent a large
contingent of troops to Cameroon to help fight incursions by Boko Haram
into its territory.
Three Chadian soldiers and 123 Boko Haram
fighters were killed in two days of clashes in northern Cameroon earlier
this week, according to Chad’s military.
A fourth Chadian soldier died of his injuries in hospital, according to the military hospital in Chad’s capital N’Djamena.
On Sunday, Chadian and Cameroonian troops travelling in armoured vehicles equipped with artillery had massed in Fotokol.
“Through
these air strikes we aim to neutralise the enemy to pave the way for
Gamboru to be liberated,” a Chadian army officer, who spoke on condition
of anonymity, told AFP.
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