A top security source disclosed that Boko Haram had successfully beaten
back three separate columns of Nigerian troops from Gwoza. “The most
recent was a team of soldiers led by Lieutenant Colonel Agwu of the
former Special Operations Battalion (SOB) now 234 Battalion,” the source
told our correspondent The Islamist terror
group, Boko Haram, has routed Nigerian troops from four towns in Borno
and Yobe states, both in Nigeria’s violence-plagued northeast that is
the epicenter of the group’s activities.
Six days ago, insurgents
belonging to Boko Haram took over the town of Gwoza after overwhelming
Nigerian troops guarding the town. The Islamist sect’s fighters invaded
the town in the middle of last week, massacring more than 100 residents,
including a brother of the Emir of Gwoza as well as the chief imam of
the town’s major mosque. Security sources disclosed that the sect also
killed or wounded numerous Nigerian soldiers during their initial
assault and, days later, in a counter-offensive mounted by the Nigerian
Army to try to wrest the town back from the stranglehold of the
Islamists.
A top security source disclosed
that Boko Haram had successfully beaten back three separate columns of
Nigerian troops from Gwoza. “The most recent was a team of soldiers led
by Lieutenant Colonel Agwu of the former Special Operations Battalion
(SOB) now 234 Battalion,” the source told our correspondent.
SaharaReporters had earlier
reported that Colonel Agwu was missing in action after his column made a
hasty retreat in the face of an onslaught by a group of heavily armed
insurgents. But our military source disclosed that Colonel Agwu was able
to escape and to make it back alive to Maimalari Barracks in Maiduguri.
“I understand he had to disguise as a woman to escape from the
militants,” our security source revealed.
Apart from Gwoza, Boko Haram
militants have also seized three towns in Yobe State, according to other
security sources. Insurgents belonging to the sect have reportedly
taken control of the towns of Buni Yadi, Buni Gari and Goniri, all in
Gujba local government area of Yobe State.
Several of the militants have
occupied camps abandoned by Nigerian troops as they fled from a series
of fierce battles with insurgents, our security sources said.
Members of the sect have bombed
Katako Bridge that links Buni Yadi with Damaturu, the Yobe State
capital. One source said the Nigerian Army was planning a broad strategy
to mount a major military campaign to retake the towns recently seized
by Boko Haram. “Our Cameroonian counterparts have been able to take back
towns from Boko Haram. We’re planning seriously to do the same thing,”
said the army officer. “We have the manpower, training and weapons to
defeat Boko Haram,” he added.
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