Nigeria’s military said Saturday that it had killed 53 fighters from the Islamist Boko Haram group when it repelled an attack on a military base in the northeast Nigerian town of Damboa.
A statement from defense spokesman Major-General Chris Olukolade added that five soldiers and a senior military officer had also been killed in an exchange of fire Friday night. The military often reports high casualty figures for the rebels and relatively low ones on its own side. It is usually not possible to verify these reports independently.
Earlier, police said insurgents had attacked the Damboa base, in the northeasterly Borno state, with rocket-propelled grenades. A security source said the raid was a revenge mission after dozens of Boko Haram militants were killed in an air and ground attack on two of their camps in the Yejiwa and Alagarno areas.
In a separate incident, also on Friday, a suicide bomber targeting worshippers at a mosque in the village of Konduga in northeast Nigeria killed five people and wounded dozens, a security source said Saturday, in an area where Islamist insurgents are mounting attacks almost daily.
The source, who declined to be named, said Muslims in the village were observing Friday prayers when the pickup truck approached.
A local vigilante group stopped the truck to inspect it and the bomber then detonated the bomb close to the mosque, he said. There was no immediate claim of responsibility, but Boko Haram was likely to be the prime suspect.
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