SHEKAU BOKO HARAM CLAIMS ATTACK IN RANN, NIGERIA
The
Boko Haram faction led by Abubakar Shekau claimed in a video released on
social media that its fighters carried out the January 14 attack on Rann, near
the border with Cameroon.
Many reports including those from AFP and
Reuters have previously attributed the incident to Islamic State West Africa
province.
The attack in Rann, some 175 km (110 miles)
northeast of the Borno state capital, Maiduguri, began late on Monday afternoon.
chioro mmigeaia split
into two factions in mid-2016. One is led by Abu Mus’ab Al-Barnawi
and largely focuses on attacking military and government targets, while the
other, led by Abubakar Shekau, is notorious for suicide bombings and
indiscriminate killings of civilians.
Shekau has pledged allegiance to ISIS leader
Abu Bakr Al-Baghdadi, but ISIS central gave its formal backing to the Barnawi
faction, which is known as Islc State West Africa province.
The Defense Post has been unable to review
the entire video released on Thursday, January 17, but according to Nigerian
journalist Ahmad Salkida who broke the news, the military base was breached
with “relative ease” and houses and other structures were burned.
An extract of the video appeared to show
militants looting supplies from a storage facility and multiple structures on
fire. Salkida reported that military hardware and ammunition was also
captured.
Rann hosts some 35,000 internally displaced people,
according to the International Organization for Migration.
MSF’s emergency program manager, Hugues
Robert said about 10,000 people had fled following the attack and that
“structures and warehouses of humanitarian organizations have been affected.”
Robert said MSF is
preparing to “assist 15,000 people with food, water and medical care” in Bodo,
7 km from Rann across the border in Cameroon.
Rann has been repeatedly attacked in the
nine-year conflict and has been hit three times since March 2018.
In attack on March 1, eight security personnel and three
aid workers were killed. Three other aid workers were kidnapped, two of whom
were later executed.
On December 6,, but it was unclear
which faction they belonged to. After an hour’s heavy fighting, the militants
were pushed out with aerial support, one security source told AFP.
There have been dozens of attacks on military
bases since July, most of which have been blamed on ISWA, or claimed by ISIS as
ISWA attacks.
The raids are part of a wider pattern of
attacks in northern Borno, which the United Nations has warned is increasingly
affecting civilians.
ISWA has lately intensified its armed
campaign, launching a number of major assaults on military targets in
Borno and neighboring Yobe state amid signs of a takeover by more hardline
leaders.
More than 27,000 people have been killed
since the insurgency began in 2009, and 1.8 million people are still homeless
and in need of humanitarian assistance.
Nigeria’s government and military have
repeatedly insisted Boko Haram is a spent force and over the last year has
encouraged internally displaced people to return.
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