The Nigerian Air Force on Friday
said it had lost another helicopter in the restive northeast, after Boko Haram
rebels raided two more towns and vigilantes and hunters clawed back a key
militant stronghold.
The second crash in a week happened
late Thursday in Yola, the capital of Adamawa, which is one of three states
that has been under emergency rule since May last year.
While there was no immediate
indication that the armed Islamist movement was responsible for the crash,
there has been an increase in Boko Haram activity in the state in recent weeks.
Boko Haram has reportedly taken over
more than two dozen towns in Adamawa, Borno and Yobe states, including the
commercial hub of Mubi, some 200 kilometres (125 miles) from Yola.
Last week, the extremists, who have
been waging a five-year insurgency to create a hardline Islamic state, renamed
Mubi “Madinatul Islam” or “City of Islam” in Arabic, residents said.
Nigeria’s chief of army staff, Major
General Kenneth Minimah, told a Senate defence committee on Thursday that the
loss of territory was “painful” but promised that troops would recapture lost
ground.
Locals and a government official
said later that about 200 vigilantes and hunters armed with home-made guns,
spears, clubs, bows and arrows, and machetes took back Mubi.
“It is true Mubi has fallen back
into the hands of Nigerian soldiers with the help of local vigilantes and hunters,”
Chibado Bobi, chief of staff in the Adamawa state governor’s office, told AFP.
“It is however too early for
residents who fled to move back to Mubi because the security and vigilantes
need to mop up all remnants of the group that may be lurking in nearby areas.”
Boko Haram had introduced its strict
version of Islamic law in the town, including amputations for accused thieves,
according to residents who fled.
The hunters captured the Boko
Haram-appointed emir, or leader, of Mubi after the attack, while militant
fighters fled.
But instead of being pushed back to
other territory it is reported to control, locals said Boko Haram invaded Hong,
50 kilometres (30 miles) south on the way towards Yola, and Gombi, to the
northwest of Mubi.
In both Hong and Gombi, the
militants were said to have razed the towns’ police stations.
The move towards Yola will raise
concerns about safety in the city, where thousands of people have taken refuge
to escape the violence.
The chopper crash near a hall of
residence at the Modibbo Adama University of Science and Technology caused
panic among students, as weapons said to be on board apparently exploded.
“We heard a huge thundering sound
which made us rush out of the hostels, thinking the school was under Boko Haram
attack,” said one student, Harisu Abdulaziz.
Another student said there was chaos
as residents at the hostel tried to flee but were prevented by soldiers
guarding the gates.
The university has been under
military protection after a spate of Islamist attacks against schools in the
region.
Kyari Mohammed, a lecturer at the
university and a specialist in Boko Haram, said the helicopter that came down
was one of two that flew over the campus.
“The crash was followed by a series
of intermittent explosions inside the chopper, which people believed to be from
weapons the chopper was ferrying,” he said.
Air force spokesman Dele Alonge
confirmed that one of its aircraft had crashed but provided no details as to
the cause or casualties.
On Monday, the military said another
helicopter made an emergency landing near Yola airport, with no casualties
reported.
(Daily Mail)
Air Force helicopter crashes as Boko Haram mount raids
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Friday, November 14, 2014
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