Boko Haram group is 'crushed', Nigerian President, Mr. Buhari claims
Nigeria's army captures a key camp and last enclave of the group, but there are reports the extremists may already be regrouping.
The Boko Haram extremist group has been crushed and forced
from its last enclave, Nigeria's president has said.
Muhammadu Buhari said Nigeria's army had captured a key Boko
Haram camp in the Sambisa forest that was its stronghold.
"The terrorists are on the run and no longer have a
place to hide," Mr Buhari said in a statement.
The capture of Camp Zero, deep within the heart of the forest,
marks the "final crushing of Boko Haram terrorists in their last
enclave", he said.
Despite the announcement, Nigeria is unlikely to see an
imminent end to suicide bombings and other terrorist attacks that have been
carried out by the group for the past years.
The AP news agency reported that the insurgents may already
be regrouping in Taraba and Bauchi states, south of their northeastern
stronghold in Borno state.
There, they could be taking advantage of a decades-old
conflict in central Nigeria between mainly Muslim nomadic cattle herders and
sedentary Christian farmers.
Boko Haram has killed 15,000 people and displaced more than
two million during its seven-year insurgency.
The group aims to create an Islamic state governed by a
strict interpretation of sharia.
In early 2015, it controlled an area in the northeast around
the size of Belgium.
But since then it has been pushed out of most of that
territory by Nigeria's army and troops from neighbouring countries - retreating
mostly to the Sambisa forest, a former colonial game reserve.
The Sambisa Forest was where Boko Haram was believed to be
holding some of more than 200 schoolgirls kidnapped in April 2014 from a school
in the town of Chibok.
The mass abduction brought the Islamic extremists world
attention and sparked an international social media campaign
#BringBackOurGirls.
"Further efforts should be intensified to locate and
free our remaining Chibok girls still in captivity," Mr Buhari said.
Some girls have been freed in negotiations, and others
escaped. But the majority remain missing, while others are believed to have
died in captivity.
Mr Buhari's statement made no mention of the whereabouts of
Abubakar Shekau, the leader of the Boko Haram faction based in the forest.
Source: SkyNews UK
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