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NEWS and REPORTS => World News => Topic started by: HuffingtonPost on Sep 04, 2014, 07:31 PM

Title: #News: Hundreds Flee Nigeria's Maiduguri As Boko Haram Militants Advance
Post by: HuffingtonPost on Sep 04, 2014, 07:31 PM


By Lanre Ola                

MAIDUGURI, Nigeria, Sept 4 (Reuters) - Hundreds of civilians  are fleeing Nigeria's northeastern city of Maiduguri as fears  grow that Islamist Boko Haram militants may try to assault the  Borno state capital after seizing towns and territory around it,  residents said on Thursday.                

Heavily-armed Boko Haram fighters using captured military  vehicles and weapons have taken towns and villages to the north,  east and south of Maiduguri in the last few weeks and days in an  apparent strategy to encircle the city and hold territory.                

Apprehension among Maiduguri residents grew after fierce  fighting since Monday between Nigeria's military and attacking  Boko Haram fighters over the town of Bama, 70 km (45 miles)  southeast of Maiduguri. Thousands have fled Bama amid   conflicting reports of who has control.                

The militants, who have issued videos of themselves storming  into towns with guns blazing aboard trucks mounted with heavy  machine guns, also took the smaller town of Bara on Tuesday, to  the southwest of Maiduguri.                

Boko Haram, whose leader Abubakar Shekau last month declared  a "Muslim territory" in the northeast after capturing the town  of Gwoza on the Cameroon border, is believed to be trying to  mimic the example of the Islamic State (IS) in Syria and Iraq  which announced the creation of a separate caliphate there.                

"They are creating territory for themselves ... they have  seen what IS have done, so they are trying to imitate them,"  Musa Sumail, a human rights activist in Maiduguri who reports on  the violence in the northeast, told Reuters.                

The Borno state government and the armed forces have said  Bama remains under government control, but did not immediately  respond to calls asking for updates on the security situation.                

Travelers packed bus stations in Maiduguri seeking transport  westwards towards Damaturu in neighboring Yobe state, the only  safe exit route out. Vehicles laden with passengers and  possessions were also seen on the Maiduguri-Damaturu road.                

"I'm leaving now because people keep saying Boko Haram may  attack Maiduguri anytime and it is possible," said Saka Lawal, a  car mechanic who was leaving with his wife and two children.                

Civil servants, traders and even the families of soldiers  were among those moving out, residents said.                

President Goodluck Jonathan's government and the armed  forces have faced mounting public criticism of their apparent  inability to check Boko Haram's five-year insurgency, which has  ravaged the poor northeast corner of Africa's biggest economy.                                

U.S. CONCERN                

Boko Haram's intensifying attacks in Sub-Saharan Africa's  No. 1 oil producer, which counts the United States among its  crude export markets, were a serious threat to the country's  security, the top U.S. diplomat for Africa said on Thursday.                

"We are very troubled by the apparent capture of Bama and  the prospects for an attack on Maiduguri, which would impose a  tremendous toll on the civilian population," Assistant Secretary  of State for African Affairs Linda Thomas-Greenfield told a  bilateral security meeting in the capital Abuja on Thursday.                

Nigeria's oilfields on its southern coast have not been  affected by the Boko Haram attacks so far.                

Nigeria holds a presidential election in February in which  southerner Jonathan is expected to seek re-election. Many  believe domestic political tensions stemming from the historic  rivalry between Nigeria's mostly Muslim north and largely  Christian south is also stoking the persisting violence.                

Popular anger spiked after Boko Haram abducted more than 200  teenage northeast schoolgirls in mid-April, triggering a social  media campaign that gave global prominence to the group.                

The Sunni jihadist movement, whose name means "western  education is forbidden", has killed thousands since launching an  uprising in 2009 to establish an Islamic state. Outside the  northeast, it has claimed shootings and bombings across the  north and, more sporadically, in the federal capital Abuja and  even in the southern coastal commercial hub Lagos.                

Counter-terrorism experts say links exist between Boko Haram  and other Islamist movements, such as al Qaeda's North African  franchise and Somalia's al Qaeda-linked al Shabaab, but there  has been little evidence so far of extensive cooperation.                

The United States, Britain, France and Israel have been  providing intelligence and training support to Nigeria's armed  forces, but this cooperation has been hampered by persistent  allegations of rights abuses leveled against the military.  Rights groups have accused the military of executing and  torturing suspects, and killings civilians, charges it denies.          (Additional reporting by Pascal Fletcher and Tim Cocks in  Lagos; Writing by Pascal Fletcher; Editing by Sophie Walker)
Source: huffingtonPost