Gunmen armed with
explosives attacked a police station, a primary school and two cellphone towers
in a town in Fika, Damaturu on Sunday, setting them ablaze, JTF and residents
said.
“We heard that there
were some attacks in Fika by
suspected Boko Haram terrorists. They attacked two
telecommunication masts, a police station and a primary school,” said Lazarus
Eli, JTF spokesman in Yobe State.
A resident said he
had seen the bodies of two policemen being brought out of the razed police
station, but Eli said he could not immediately confirm any casualties.
Eli said troops had
deployed to the town to contain the violence. Fika lies some 170 kilometres
(110 miles) from Damaturu, the capital of Yobe State and a hotbed of Islamist
extremist group Boko Haram.
Residents said the
gunmen attacked their targets with explosives before dawn at around 4:30 am.
“They threw
explosives and fired gunshots at their targets, setting them ablaze, and fled
after the attack,” Tanimu Mani told AFP.
“Soldiers who arrived
in the town went inside the burnt police station and brought out the bodies of
two policemen killed in the attack,” he said.
Another resident,
student Hassan Gaji, said he had heard blasts and gunshots during early morning
prayers.
“They were shooting
seriously for about one hour,” he said, adding that the town had been taken
over by police and soldiers.
He said the attackers
had entered Fika on the road leading from Potiskum to the north “and went
straight to the police station, bombed it and proceeded to the primary school
in the town”.
A police source said
the attackers looted the armoury before setting the police station ablaze.
“They emptied the
armoury during the attack and took away some 20 guns and some rounds of
ammunition,” the officer, who did not want to be named, told AFP.
Witnesses said
panicked residents were fleeing Fika for nearby Potiskum on Sunday following
the attack.
“A lot of people are
now leaving for Potiskum which has been relatively calm in recent weeks,” the
witness said.
Some towns in Yobe
state, including Damaturu, Potiskum and Fika have been hard hit by deadly
attacks by Boko Haram in recent months, leaving hundreds of people dead and
prompting a heavy army deployment.
Violence linked to
the Boko Haram insurgency is believed to have left more than 2,800 people dead
since 2009, including killings by the security forces.
Boko Haram has
claimed to be seeking an Islamic state in Nigeria, Africa’s most populous
nation and largest oil producer, although its demands have repeatedly shifted.
The sect has targeted
government and security figures, as well as Christians in churches and even
mosques, prominent Muslim clerics and scholars in the country, which is divided
between a mainly Muslim north and predominantly Christian south.
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