Tuesday, June 18, 2013
7 secondary school students, 2 Teachers killed in Fresh Boko Haram school attack
Suspected Islamist extremists
have attacked a secondary
school and military checkpoint
in northeast, leaving 11 people
dead including seven students,
the military said Monday.
Details were sketchy and the information could not be
independently confirmed. Mobile phone lines have been cut in
much of the northeast since the start of a military offensive
targeting Islamist extremist group Boko Haram on May 15
and access to the area is limited.
The attackers were said to have stormed student living
quarters on Sunday night in the city of Damaturu and shot
sporadically, killing seven students and two teachers. Two
insurgents were also killed, the military said.
A military checkpoint was also attacked and soldiers fought a
five-hour gun battle with the extremists, leaving three soldiers
wounded, said Lieutenant Eli Lazarus, a military spokesman
in Yobe state, where Damaturu is located.
“Two teachers and two insurgents were killed during the
separate attack, while seven innocent students lost their lives,”
he said in a statement.
“Three of the Boko Haram terrorists were arrested and are
presently in (military) custody.”
The sequence of events was unclear, including whether the
shootout occurred around the school or at the checkpoint.
Lazarus could not be reached for further information.
Boko Haram, whose name roughly translates to “Western
education is sin,” has carried out multiple attacks on schools
in violence-torn northeast Nigeria.
The group has said it is fighting to create an Islamic state in
Nigeria’s mainly Muslim north.
The insurgency has left some 3,600 people dead since 2009,
including killings by the security services, who have come
under major criticism over alleged abuses.
AFP
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