Thirty Boko Haram fighters killed one another yesterday in Madagali,
Adamawa State during a leadership tussle over who should succeed
Abubakar Shekau, shot dead by the Nigerian military last week.Madagali
is one of local government areas of Adamawa State occupied by the
insurgents. This is even as about 21 people were killed by terrorists in
an attack on two Borno communities on Wednesday.
In the Madagali incident, trapped residents said a fight occurred
over the disagreement on whether to pick a new leader or surrender to
the military which killed their Amir (leader) in Bazza.
“From what we learnt, 30 Boko Haram fighters have been killed in
Madagali town after a fight ensued between them over whether to
surrender their weapons. They just kept shooting themselves freely,” one
Mr Musa Audi told Daily Sun. According to him, there had been disquiet
in Boko Haram camp with some calling and agitating for a ceasefire.
Another resident, simply called Stephen, who corroborated Musa, said
already, there is also leadership crisis over who should emerge the new
leader in Madagali. For almost three weeks now, Madagali, Gulak, Shuwa
and Michika towns have been under the control of Boko Haram.”
He said residents told him anybody who violates the rules have his/her fingers cut off or flogged according to the offence .
“They cut-off fingers, flog offenders and marry off spinsters.” The
military spokesman in Yola, Capt. Jonathan Nuhu, was yet to react to the
development as at press time.
Meanwhile, a security source in Borno State said the insurgents who
rode to Shaffa and Shindiffu in Hawul Local Government, launched the
coordinated attacks at about 10pm on Wednesday, lasting till midnight.
The source said the insurgents shot sporadically as soon as they
arrived in the communities, about 230 kilometres from the capital,
Maiduguri. The development forced hundreds of people from their homes
into the bush even as the insurgents pursued the residents and opened
fire on them.
About 21 people including one Pastor Eliud Mshelizza attached to the
local assembly of Living Faith Church (aka Winners’ Chapel) and a
teacher at Government Girls’ Secondary School, Shaffa died in the
attacks,” a resident of Biu, who lost a family member told Daily Sun. He
said the insurgents burnt public buildings, hospital, churches and many
houses in both communities.
However, a military source said soldiers from the Biu Artillery and
neighbouring Adamawa State were mobilised to repel the attack, adding
that the insurgents were intercepted on the way by the soldiers who
engaged them in fierce battle. “Our troops rounded up the terrorists and
almost all of them were killed,” the source said.
The southern part of Borno has witnessed series of attacks since
April when insurgency heightened in the state. Wednesday’s attack was
the third time Shaffa came under Boko Haram siege, leaving tales of
woes; death and destruction of property.
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