MAIDUGURI, Nigeria
(Reuters) - Gunmen suspected to be from the Boko Haram Islamist sect
stormed two villages in northeast Nigeria, killing 10 people, after a
botched attempt by local vigilantes to arrest some of the militants.
The attack by Boko Haram, which seeks to establish a strictly
Islamic state in religiously-mixed Nigeria, occurred on Sunday after
vigilante youths tried to approach a militant hideout in Konduga, in
remote Borno state.
"The insurgents fled their hideout and, on their way, ambushed
our colleagues, killed three of them and invaded Kawuri and Fori," said
Ahmed Kyari, a surviving vigilante.
He said the militants shot dead another seven villagers and burned 20 houses to the ground.
Boko Haram's four-year-old insurgency still poses the most
serious security threat to Africa's leading oil- and gas-producing
state, despite an all-out military offensive against it ordered by
President Goodluck Jonathan in May.
Pro-government vigilante activism by angry youth groups has
helped the state to capture hundreds of Boko Haram suspects, but the
rebels have retaliated with major attacks on civilians.
Boko Haram militants disguised as soldiers killed 19 people at a
checkpoint on Sunday, mostly by slitting their throats, witnesses said.
Government forces have also been accused of committing
atrocities, with Amnesty International last week reporting that hundreds
of Boko Haram suspects were dying in captivity. The military says such
abuses are rare.
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