Nigerian troops were forced to retreat from Boko Haram’s Sambisa
Forest stronghold in the restive northeast after a landmine blast killed
one soldier and three vigilantes, security sources said Thursday.
Military
top brass said on Wednesday that soldiers were conducting offensives
“in some forest locations” in the area after it was announced last week
that operations were imminent.
The Sambisa Forest is located in
the state of Borno, some 80 kilometres (50 miles) from the town of
Chibok, from where more than 200 schoolgirls were kidnapped in April
last year.
It has been claimed the 219 schoolgirls still being
held were initially kept in the former game reserve, although others
have said they may have been split up and moved to Chad or Cameroon.
Defence
spokesman Chris Olukolade said in a statement that a senior Boko Haram
commander was killed, as well as a number of militants who attacked a
patrol.
“The operations especially in forest locations are
progressing in defiance of obstacles and landmines emplaced by the
terrorists,” he added.
But progress has been severely hindered
because of improvised explosive devices, a civilian vigilante involved
in the operation told AFP in an account backed by a security source.
“Boko
Haram have buried landmines all over the routes leading to their camps
in the forest, which is no doubt a huge obstacle retarding the military
offensive against them,” he told AFP.
Troops withdrew just five kilometres from Boko Haram’s main camp in the densely forested area because of landmines.
“We
decided to turn back since the route was unsafe. As we were driving
back, one of the vehicles carrying CJTF (Civilian Joint Task Force) hit a
mine,” he added.
“A soldier and three CJTF were killed while
another soldier was injured. We trudged along and made it back to Bama
yesterday (Wednesday).”
The vigilante added: “There are no
soldiers in Sambisa right now. We all returned to Bama after the
horrifying experience of manoeuvring through minefields.”
– Persistent threat –
There
was no immediate response from the military, which with its military
coalition partners Chad, Niger and Cameroon has driven out Boko Haram
from captured towns in recent weeks.
“Boko Haram are in large numbers in Sambisa,” said the vigilante, who requested anonymity for security reasons.
“All
their fighters who were pushed out of Bama, Dikwa, Gwoza and Damboa (in
Borno state) all moved to Boko Haram camps in Sambisa,” he added.
Details
of the offensive came as a series of photographs circulated on social
media accounts linked to the Islamic State group of heavily armed
fighters, purportedly from Boko Haram.
No independent verification
was possible but some of the accounts said the images were released
under the name “The Islamic State in West Africa”.
Boko Haram
chief Abubakar Shekau pledged allegiance to IS group leader Abu Bakr
al-Baghdadi in March. The Middle Eastern militants responded by urging
Muslims to support the rebels in Nigeria.
Experts have seen the
formal tie-up as a sign of weakness by the Nigerian Islamists but warned
not to write off the group, which continues to mount smaller-scale
attacks in the region.
According to residents of Kalabalge, who
fled to the Cameroon town of Fotokol, Boko Haram fighters have taken
over the Borno state town, which is near Nigeria’s border with Chad.
Thousands
of Shuwa Arabs — who are from the same ethnic group as many Chadian
soldiers — have been pushed out of villages in the area since the
Nigerian army seized the group’s headquarters in Gwoza last month.
Resident
Grema Gana said there were “light-skinned fighters of north African
extraction” in the militant ranks, adding that Chadian forces operating
in the area had detained some of them.
Another resident, who asked
not to be named for his own safety, said Chadian troops conducted an
operation in the Kalabalge area on Monday as Boko Haram had returned
after being driven out.
He also said “some foreign fighters from north Africa” were detained.
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