US Secretary of State John Kerry
branded a Boko Haram massacre in northern Nigeria a “crime against humanity”
Thursday as satellite images suggested massive destruction in the two towns
reported razed by its fighters.
“What they have done… is a crime
against humanity, nothing less,” Kerry said as first images of what is feared
to be the worst atrocity of the six-year Islamist insurgency emerged.
Hundreds of people, if not more, are
reported to have been killed in attacks on the towns of Baga and Doron Baga on
the shores of Lake Chad in Borno state, according to Amnesty International.
Boko Haram was “evil” and a serious
threat “not just in Nigeria and the region but to all of our values”, Kerry
said during a visit to Bulgaria. He said he had spoken earlier to his British
counterpart Philip Hammond — who was also in Sofia — about the possibility of
“a special initiative with respect to Nigeria and with respect to Boko Haram”.
Amnesty and New York-based watchdog
Human Rights Watch published separate satellite images Thursday claiming to
show massive destruction in the adjacent towns, adding to fears they may
suffered the deadliest strike yet in Boko Haram’s bloody campaign.
Amnesty’s images showed aerial shots
of the towns on January 2 — the day before the attack — and January 7, after
homes and businesses were razed.
– ‘Catastrophic’ devastation –
The group said the images suggested
“devastation of catastrophic proportions”, with more than 3,700 structures —
620 in Baga and 3,100 in Doron Baga — damaged or completely destroyed.
HRW said 11 percent of Baga and 57
percent of Doron Baga was destroyed, most likely by fire, attributing the
greater damage in Doron Baga to the fact that it houses a regional military
base.
Nigeria’s military, which often
downplays death tolls, said that 150 died and dismissed as “sensational” claims
that 2,000 may have lost their lives in the attacks.
Local officials have said at least
16 settlements around Baga were burnt to the ground and that at least 20,000
people fled.
HRW said the exact death toll was
unknown and quoted one local resident as saying: “No one stayed back to count
the bodies.
“We were all running to get out of
town ahead of Boko Haram fighters who have since taken over the area.”
Amnesty said Boko Haram were
believed to have targeted civilian vigilantes helping the army after they
overran a Multinational Joint Task Force base for troops from Nigeria, Niger
and Chad who have been involved in operations against them.
– ‘Killed in labour’ –
Harrowing testimony has been
emerging from survivors about the scale and brutality of the assault in Baga,
included one woman reportedly killed while in labour.
Witnesses who spoke to AFP described
seeing decomposing bodies in the streets and one man who escaped after hiding
for three days said he was “stepping on bodies” as he fled through the bush.
Amnesty said on Thursday it had
received accounts from survivors of Boko Haram fighters killing a woman as she
was giving birth, during indiscriminate fire that also cut down small children.
“Half of the baby boy (was) out and
she died like this,” the unnamed witness was quoted as saying.
A man in his fifties added: “They
killed so many people. I saw maybe around 100 killed at that time in Baga. I
ran to the bush. As we were running, they were shooting and killing.”
Another woman said: “I don’t know
how many but there were bodies everywhere we looked.”
Medical charity Doctors Without
Borders (MSF) said on Tuesday that its team in capital of Borno state,
Maiduguri, was providing assistance to 5,000 survivors of the attack.
The UN refugee agency has said that
more than 11,300 Nigerian refugees fled into neighbouring Chad.
Some 300 women were said to have
been rounded up and detained at a school, witnesses told Amnesty, adding that
older women, mothers and children were released after four days but younger
women kept.
Amnesty said the witness accounts
and images reinforced fears the attack was Boko Haram’s “largest and most
destructive” in its fight to establish a hardline Islamic state in northeast
Nigeria, which has killed over 13,000 people since 2009.
“The deliberate killing of civilians
and destruction of their property by Boko Haram are war crimes and crimes
against humanity and must be duly investigated,” it added.
The Baga attack came before
presidential and parliamentary elections in Nigeria next month and an upsurge
in violence apparently designed to undermine the vote.
Nigeria’s electoral commission said
voting was “unlikely” in rebel-controlled areas and arrangements were being
made to allow hundreds of thousands of displaced people to cast their ballots.
Boko Haram evil, serious threat not just in Nigeria – Kerry
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Thursday, January 15, 2015
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