GORE
gory details of last week’s Boko Haram attacks on Damaturu, the Yobe
State capital, emerged yesterday. No fewer than 128 people were killed,
it was learnt.
Military
and hospital reports indicated to Associated Press (AP) that 23
soldiers, eight policemen and 95 insurgents were killed in the five-hour
long battle between the Islamic extremists and troops.
There
has been no specific figure given by the military on the casualty , but
the latest findings showed that the militants had a strong hand and
caught troops by surprise.
The
attack came after a lull and almost six months after the federal
government imposed a state of emergency in Yobe along with Borno and
Adamawa states.
Reporters
saw that the extremists set ablaze four police command posts and an
army barracks where they looted vehicles and weapons.
Police
and witnesses said at least two civilians died — a man believed killed
by the insurgents and a civil servant shot by soldiers for breaking the
curfew.
Also
yesterday, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees UNHCR)
urged neigbouring countries to keep their borders open for Nigerians
fleeing the escalating violence and who may be in need of international
protection.
The Geneva-based agency also advised states against forced return of people to the region.
Spokesperson
Dan McNorton told reporters: “Our recommendations are contained in a
newly issued Return Advisory, which seeks to ensure that humanitarian
and asylum principles are upheld in light of the worsening security
situation in northeastern Nigeria.”
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