Boko Haram staged an overnight assault on a border town in Niger
and a suicide bomber detonated explosives near a market in the same
town a few hours later, witnesses said Sunday, in a sign the extremists'
offensive against the West African nation was
intensifying.
The attack on the town of Diffa began Saturday night, and fighting
between Boko Haram and Niger's army lasted until 5 a.m. toward the
town's southern entrance before the extremists were forced to flee and
calm was restored, Diffa resident Adam Boukar said.
It was the second time the town had come under attack by Boko Haram since Friday.
A few hours after the attack was repulsed, a suicide bomber who
witnesses said they believed was female blew herself up in Diffa's
pepper market, which attracts traders and customers from Nigeria and
other countries in the region.
"This young girl who was wearing the bomb made it explode right in the
middle of the market. At the moment the market is surrounded by
soldiers, and the rest of the town also," said resident Kader Lawan.
Officials could not immediately be reached to confirm residents' accounts or give casualty figures.
Boko Haram has used suicide bombers driving explosive-laden cars and
wearing explosive vests in dozens of deadly attacks on crowded markets
and bustling bus stations that have killed hundreds of people. This
would be the first such attack outside of Nigeria.
The fight against Boko Haram has taken on an increasingly regional
dimension in recent months, with the extremists staging attacks in both Cameroon
and Niger last week alone. Foreign fighters from neighboring countries
are said to be part of the terror group, which recruits with payments
and by force as well as on an ideological basis.
On Saturday, regional and African Union officials meeting in Cameroon's
capital, Yaounde, unveiled a proposal for a force of as many as 8,750
members to combat Boko Haram, with manpower coming from Nigeria, Chad,
Cameroon, Niger and Benin.
Officials said they envisioned deploying the force as early as next month, though funding issues could delay that timeline.
As the meeting was held, thousands of young people marched through the
streets of Yaounde as part of a demonstration organized by Cameroon's
National Youth Council to discourage collaboration with Boko Haram and
to voice support for the military.
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