Boko Haram gunmen on Sunday stormed a college dormitory in
Nigeria’s conflict-scarred northeast, firing on students as they slept, the
military told AFP, in the latest such attack blamed on the Islamist insurgents.
Security forces were at the scene but details on the number of
dead and injured were not yet available, area military spokesman Lazarus Eli
said.
The early morning assault targeted the College of Agriculture in
the town of Gujba in Yobe state, Eli said.
It was carried out by “Boko Haram terrorists who went into the
school and opened fire on students,” while they were sleeping, he added.
A police source, who requested anonymity, told AFP that initial
reports indicated the death toll could be high but he was not prepared to
discuss figures.
Gujba is roughly 30 kilometres (18 miles) from the state capital
of Damaturu.
Yobe has seen a series of brutal attacks targeting students in
recent months, all blamed on Boko Haram.
The worst occurred in July in the town of Mamudo, where the
Islamists threw explosives and sprayed gunfire into dormitories in the middle
of the night, killing 41 students.
The name Boko Haram means ‘Western education is forbidden’ and
the group has repeatedly attacked schools, universities and colleges during its
four-year insurgency.
The military has described the spate of recent school attacks as
a sign of desperation by the Islamists, claiming they only have the capacity to
hit soft targets.
The defence ministry has said that an offensive launched against
Boko Haram in mid-May has decimated the group and scattered their fighters
across remote parts of the northeast.
While many of the recent attacks have occurred in more remote
areas, often targeting defenceless civilians, the unchecked killing has cast
doubt on the success of the military’s campaign.
The northeast remains under a state of emergency imposed on May
14.
Scores have been killed this month, including in the
northeastern town of Benisheik in Borno state, where at least 142 people were
slaughtered by presumed Boko Haram fighters who came disguised as soldiers, set
up checkpoints and fired on motorists and bystanders.
Some of the recent violence has targeted vigilante groups which
have formed to help the military.
Boko Haram has said it is fighting to create an Islamic state in
Nigeria’s mainly Muslim north, but the group is believed to made up of
different factions with varying aims.
A toll earlier this year said the conflict is estimated to have
cost more than 3,600 lives, including killings by the security forces. The
current figure is likely much higher.
Nigeria is Africa’s most populous country and top oil producer.
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