Suspected Islamist gunmen abducted about 20 women from a nomadic
settlement, according to Bloomberg News, near the northeastern Nigerian
town of Chibok, where more than 200 schoolgirls were kidnapped two
months ago, a local official said.
The ethnic Fulani women were taken after the assailants attacked a
settlement known as Garkin Fulani, at midday Sunday, and ordered the
women into their vehicles at gunpoint. Alhaji Tar, a member of the
Vigilante Group of Nigeria, said in a phone interview, confirmed this.
They were driven off to an unknown location, he said.
“We got the information that they went there, and took away the women
at the time none of the males were there,” Tar said. “The three young
men they met there could not help the women, as the gunmen also ordered
the three of them to enter the Hilux vans, and took all of them away.”
Boko Haram, the Islamist militant group whose insurgency against
Nigeria’s government has killed thousands of people over the past five
years, abducted more than 200 girls from a school in Chibok in April.
The U.S. and U.K. sent teams to Nigeria to help the government find the
schoolgirls, and Israel and France have pledged assistance.
Calls to Borno Police Commissioner Lawal Tanko’s mobile phone didn’t
connect, when Bloomberg news sought a comment on the latest attack.
Separately in Borno, the Nigerian army killed more than 50 suspected
insurgents in a June 7 operation, which prevented rebel assaults on
villages in Borno and Adamawa states, military authorities said today.
“
The attack was launched on the terrorists as they filed out of the
forest to embark on their mission,” Nigeria’s Defense Headquarters said
in a statement posted on its Facebook page. Four soldiers were wounded n
the firefight, it said. |
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