PHOTOS: See The Sophisticated Guns Captured From Boko Haram By Nigerian Soldiers
A concerted push by Nigeria’s military and neighbours Chad, Cameroon
and Niger has regained considerable ground in the fight against Boko
Haram. The Nigerian army said it has repelled Boko Haram from all but
three local government districts in the north-east.
“We have three local governments remaining, Abadam, Kala-Balge and
Gwoza, and we are optimistic that with time we will liberate those,”
Lieutenant-General Tobiah Minimah, the army chief of staff, told
reporters.
Waving captured black and white militant flags, soldiers from Niger
and Chad celebrated their liberation of the Nigerian town of Damasak
from Boko Haram.
The insurgents had seized Damasak with little resistance in November 2014. Soldiers from Niger hold up a Boko Haram flag that they seized in the town of Damasak, Nigeria(Emmanuel Braun/Reuters)A Boko Haram flag is displayed by soldiers in the recently retaken town of Damasak, Nigeria(Emmanuel Braun/Reuters)An Islamist flag flies from a mosque in Damasak, Nigeria(Emmanuel Braun/Reuters)A Boko Haram sign is seen in the recently retaken town of Damasak, Nigeria(Emmanuel Braun/Reuters)Chadian
soldiers drive in the recently retaken town of Damasak, Nigeria, after
armies from Nigeria, Cameroon, Chad and Niger launched an offensive to
end Boko Haram’s campaign(Emmanuel Braun/Reuters)Debris
is scattered in front of a building that Boko Haram insurgents used as
their base in Dikwa, Nigeria, before being driven out by the Chadian
military(Madjiasra Nako/Reuters)Weapons captured from Boko Haram are seen in the recently retaken town of Damasak(Emmanuel Braun/Reuters)A
man wears a sign on his back, requesting to be trained and sent to the
front line to fight against Boko Haram, at a march in Yaounde, Cameroon(Bate Felix/Reuters)
Boko Haram has been fighting a six-year insurgency to create an
Islamic state and had taken control of large parts of Nigeria’s
north-east in the past year. It became notorious internationally after
kidnapping more than 200 schoolgirls last April.
At the start of this year, Boko Haram controlled around 20 local
government areas, a territory the size of Belgium. In recent months,
Nigeria has stepped up its campaign against the militants, and, with the
help of a regional force that includes Niger and Chad, has retaken
dozens of towns. Children fleeing from Boko Haram gather at Gudumariya Refugees Camp in Niger(Olatunji Omirin/AFP)Soldiers from Niger patrol in a truck at Kabalewa Refugee Camp, where Nigerians fleeing from Boko Haram are sheltered(Olatunji Omirin/AFP)
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