Nigeria, Chad disagree over bombing of Boko Haram bases

Olukolade
Olukolade
Olukolade

Chad’s military said it had carried out air strikes against Boko Haram bases in Nigeria in retaliation for twin suicide bombings in Chad this week that killed at least 34 people, but the announcement was strongly rejected by the Defence Headquarters in Abuja.

The air raids caused heavy human and material damage to six of the Islamist militants’ bases, Chad’s military said late on Wednesday, without providing further details.

Nigerian authorities denied reports that the attacks had taken place on its soil, saying they were likely to have instead hit targets in neighbouring Niger.

“The claim that the Chadian military have conducted air strikes against six terrorist camps in Nigeria is not correct,” said Director of Defence Information, Major General Chris Olukolade.

He spoke further: “The fact is that the Nigerian Air Force surveillance mission identified targets tagged as Camp 6 around Bosso town which is not within Nigeria’s territory and alerted the partners accordingly.

“The places reported to have been struck by the Chadian are therefore most likely to be in Niger Republic and not Nigeria as widely reported in the international media.

“Although the terms of the multilateral and bilateral understanding with partners in the war against terror allow some degree of hot pursuit against the terrorists, the territory of Nigeria has not been violated as insinuated in the reports circulated in some foreign media.

“The Nigerian military will continue to cooperate with partners in the mission to exterminate or contain terrorists strictly in conformity with existing terms of the Concept of Operation at strategic, operational or tactical levels.

“It is however important that issues are accurately reported while avoiding misleading or unnecessary sensationalism from any quarter.”

A few hours after Chad’s announcement, Boko Haram militants attacked two villages in neighbouring Niger’s southern region of Diffa, killing 38 civilians, most of them women and children, and burning over 100 homes, Niger’s government said.

The attackers drove into the villages in the Gueskerou area, along the banks of the Komadugu River which separates Niger and Nigeria, late on Wednesday in cars and on motorbikes, security officials told Reuters. They shot residents before setting fire to the thatched houses where others were hiding.

“Air and ground operations by our defence and security forces are under way in the sector to catch and neutralise the terrorists,” the government statement said.

By mounting two major attacks outside its northern Nigerian stronghold in a few days, Boko Haram has demonstrated its ability to strike back in defiance of the coalition of regional armies that has driven it from many of its Nigerian strongholds.

Chad has been a driving force behind the regional campaign, which has inflicted a series of defeats on Boko Haram since January.

Monday’s simultaneous suicide attacks on a police headquarters and a training school in N’Djamena were the first of their kind in Chad.

Authorities in Chad said four Boko Haram fighters were among the dead and at least five suspects have been detained in connection with the attacks, but no one has claimed responsibility for the bombings.

“Our defence and security forces will hunt down without mercy these terrorists without faith or law, so that spilling the blood of Chadians will not go unpunished,” said Wednesday’s written statement by army spokesman Colonel Azem Bermendoa.

Chad has announced measures including a ban on head-to-toe burqas to tighten security in the capital, home to the headquarters of a 3,000-strong French military mission.