BAUCHI, Nigeria
Jihadists linked to the
Islamic State have attacked a UN base and overrun a humanitarian hub in north-eastern
Nigeria, trapping 25 aid workers, security and humanitarian sources said.Nigerian soldiers patrol
Scores of Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP)
fighters invaded the town of Dikwa in restive Borno state, dislodging troops
from the military base and torching the humanitarian hub, a military
source told our reporter on Monday.
“We have 25 staff sheltering in the bunker which is under
siege by the militants… but so far no staff has been affected,” a humanitarian
source said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
Military reinforcements, including fighter jets and a
helicopter gunship, had been deployed to help repel the attackers, the military
source said.
A spokesman for UN chief Antonio Guterres confirmed
only that there was a “security incident,” but gave no further details.
For more than a decade, Nigeria’s military has battled an
insurgency by the Islamist group Boko Haram that has devastated the northeast, killing at least 36,000
people and displacing more than two million.
The ISWAP group split from Boko Haram in 2016 and has
become a dominant threat in the region, attacking soldiers and bases while
killing and kidnapping passengers at bogus checkpoints.
The violence has spread into neighboring Niger, Chad, and
Cameroon, prompting a regional military coalition to fight the
militants.
The latest attack comes after Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari replaced his four top military commanders after
months of pressure over his government’s failure to end the Islamist
insurgency.
The latest assault in Dikwa comes three years to the day
after ISWAP fighters attacked a UN humanitarian hub in the remote northeastern
town of Rann, killing three aid staff and abducting a female worker.
On Friday, ISWAP fighters in trucks fitted with machine
guns raided Dikwa, sending residents fleeing.
The town, 90 kilometers (55 miles) from the Borno state
capital Maiduguri, is home to more than 130,000 people, including 75,000 who
had already fled from other parts of the region and were living in camps where
they rely on food handouts from aid agencies. - AFP
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