A scene of Boko Haram attack
The Amnesty International has described
the January 3 attack on Baga community in Borno State as the deadliest
in the history of Boko Haram’s over five-year reign of terror in the
North-East of Nigeria, saying about 2,000 people may have been killed in
the incident.
AI, in a statement on Friday, said it had
reports of the town being razed to the ground, leaving around 2,000
people dead in the process.
A researcher for Amnesty International in
Nigeria, Daniel Eyre, said, “The attack on Baga and surrounding towns
looks as if it could be Boko Haram’s deadliest act in a catalogue of
increasingly heinous attacks carried out by the group.
“If reports that the town was largely
razed to the ground and that hundreds or even as many as two thousand
civilians were killed are true, this marks a disturbing and bloody
escalation of Boko Haram’s ongoing onslaught against the civilian
population.”
“We are currently working to find out
more details of what happened during the attack on Baga and the
surrounding area. This attack reiterates the urgent need for Boko Haram
to stop the senseless killing of civilians and for the Nigerian
government to take measures to protect a population who live in constant
fear of such attacks,” Eyre added.
Since 2009 when the sect began its deadly
campaign, targeting civilians and military personnel through raids and
bomb attacks, scores of lives have been lost. According to United
States-based Council on Foreign Relations, more than 10,000 were killed
by the group last year alone, many of them children and old people.
Meanwhile, shooting and heavy artillery fire were heard on the outskirts of Damaturu on Friday, Reuters reported. No further details were given as of the time of filing this report.
It will be recalled that suspected Boko
Haram militants raided Damaturu, Yobe State, 130km from Maiduguri, Borno
State in early December last year.
The United Nations refugee agency on
Friday reported that some 7,300 Nigerian refugees had arrived in western
Chad in the past 10 days, fleeing attacks by insurgents on Baga town
and surrounding villages in North-East Nigeria.
The UNHCR spokesperson, Adrian Edwards,
said UNHCR teams in Chad were at the border and seeking more information
on the new arrivals and their needs.
The attack this week on Baga left
hundreds of people dead, according to media reports, and forced most of
its surviving inhabitants to flee.
The newly arrived refugees in Chad are
staying with local communities in villages around 450 kilometres
north-west of the capital, N’Djamena. The Chadian government has
requested the assistance of aid agencies to help the refugees.
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