Air Force drone bombs Boko Haram base, Switzerland denies funding fight against group

Boko Haram

The Nigerian Air Force says a drone bombed a Boko Haram logistics base in Garin Moloma, about one kilometre north of the Sambisa Forest, possibly hitting an ammunition depot and dealing a “major setback” to the Islamic extremists.

A statement from Group Captain Ayodele Famuyiwa on Wednesday said the first attack by an unmanned combat aerial vehicle took place when it was activated over a large gathering of vehicles at the insurgent stronghold.

It says multiple explosions and huge fire ball shown in an attached video suggest the drone hit an ammunition and fuel depot.

“The multiple explosions and huge fire ball from the location, as can be seen from the enclosed video of the UAV strike, strongly suggests that it may be either an ammunition/fuel storage or weapons/technical workshop,” the statement said.

“This strike is thus a major setback for the Boko Haram Sect, and a major plus for the fight against insurgency by own troops.”

The military said Saturday that the air force has conducted 286 operations in a sustained aerial bombardment of the Sambisa Forest over the past month, covering an area of 157,000 square kilometres (60,618 square miles).

Switzerland, however, on Wednesday said it had not given any funding to military operations against Boko Haram Islamist insurgents, after a senior African Union official said it was among donors to an international intervention force.

Boko Haram, facing the heat of a military onslaught in Nigeria, has in the past year stepped up cross-border attacks in Niger, Chad and Cameroon, while continuing shooting and suicide assaults on markets, mosques and other mostly civilian targets within Nigeria itself.

At a donor conference in Addis Ababa on Monday, AU Peace and Security Council chief, Smail Chergui, said Switzerland had contributed to funding for the force battling Boko Haram in the Lake Chad basin.

“As a neutral actor in conflict situations, Switzerland has never given financial support to military interventions and will abstain from doing so in the future,” the Swiss foreign ministry said in a statement sent to AFP by its embassy in Paris.

The statement said Switzerland had given around $12 million to alleviate the suffering of people affected by the Boko Haram crisis, but claims it was funding the military force were “incorrect”.

“Switzerland’s action in the Lake Chad region consists solely and exclusively in the financial support to the major humanitarian agencies,” it said.

Donors at the meeting in the Ethiopian capital pledged $250 million for the fight against Boko Haram, with major contributions made by Nigeria, Britain and the European Union.