Nigerian Military (UPDATES): Boko Haram Have Anti-Aircraft, Anti-Tank Guns; Destroy Heavy Weapons In Raid On Boko Haram Islamists

The military destroyed some of the heavy weapons in a raid.

The Nigerian military said on Friday that it destroyed weapons, including anti-aircraft and anti-tank guns, owned by insurgents in Borno State.
The military said in a statement that advancing troops of the Special Task Force have destroyed some terrorists' camps sited in the forests of Northern and Central Borno.


The statement was issued in Abuja on Friday and signed by Brigadier General Chris Olukolade, the Director of the Defence Information.
In his nationwide broadcast on May 14 while declaring a state of emergency in Borno, Adamawa and Yobe, President Goodluck Jonathan directed the Chief of Defence Staff, Admiral Ola Ibrahim, to deploy more troops to the three states. The President said the insurgents were not only carrying out violent acts but had commenced the process of excising some part of the Nigerian territory for themselves, and were mounting strange flags.
Brig-Gen. Olukolade noted that heavy weapons, including anti-aircraft and anti-tank guns, were also destroyed in the process.
He said the special operations, which preceded troop movement, resulted in the destruction of many of the insurgents' weapons.
Logistics, it added, such as vehicles, containers, fuel dumps and power generators were also destroyed.

It said that "the casualties inflicted on the insurgents in the course of the assault will be verified during a mop up.''
According to the statement, the Defence Headquarters is quite satisfied with the progress of the operation and the fighting spirit of participating troops. It urged the Special Task Force to sustain the tempo.
Meanwhile, border posts have all been manned by security personnel to prevent escape or infiltration by the insurgents.
Security sources earlier said that at least 20 members of the insurgents were killed in the Sambisa forest operation.
Sambisa, a forest that spreads over a distance of 300sq km from Damboa up to Gwoza, Bama and the Cameroon border, has been a hideout and training camp of the Boko Haram. The camp was first discovered early this year when a military raid was launched there.


Nigerian Jets Destroy Heavy Weapons in Raid on Boko Haram Islamists

Nigerian troops mounted air and ground attacks on camps used by the militant Islamist Boko Haram group in the northeast, destroying anti-aircraft and anti-tank weapons, a military spokesman said.

"An air campaign was carried out before soldiers went into the area," Chris Olukolade, a spokesman for Defense Headquarters, said today by phone from Abuja, the capital. The attacks in the northern and central parts of Borno state were carried out yesterday and "troops have taken over the place after destroying the camps," he said.

The military campaign follows President Goodluck Jonathan's May 14 declaration of emergency rule in the
three northeastern states of Borno, Yobe and Adamawa to tackle the insurgency by the Boko Haram group that has killed thousands since 2009. Parts of the country's northeast were being taken over by Islamist militants, Jonathan said.

Jonathan's action followed violence in the northeastern Baga, a fishing town on the shores of Lake Chad, that killed as many as 228 people after security forces responded to an attack by militants on April 16, according to local officials. The army says 30 insurgents, six civilians and a soldier were killed, and 30 houses were burned down. New York-based Human Rights Watch said satellite images of Baga show at least 2,000 homes were destroyed.

Boko Haram, whose name means "Western education is a sin" in the local Hausa language, started its violent campaign to impose Shariah law on Nigeria after police in 2009 killed its founder, Mohammed Yusuf, while in custody for his role in clashes with the security forces in the northeastern city of Maiduguri, Borno state capital. More than 700 people, mostly his followers, died in the violence.

Since then the group has carried out gun and bomb attacks across the north and Abuja that have killed more than 1,500 people, according to Human Rights Watch. Africa's biggest oil producer and most populous country of more than 160 million people is roughly split between a mainly Muslim north and a predominantly Christian south.

While soldiers attacked militant camps in the northeast, gunmen suspected to be Boko Haram fighters attacked a police station and a bank in the northwestern town of Daura, about 700 kilometers (430 miles) from Maiduguri, Ikedichi Iweha, a military spokesman in the northern city of Kano said today by phone. Seven people died in the fighting including two soldiers and five militants, the army said.

The offensive against the militants "will continue until we get all the camps, all their locations destroyed," Olukolade said. Troops will take the campaign to "everywhere we can locate the terrorists, not just in the three states" under emergency rule, he said.