Boko Haram steps up attacks in Cameroon
A screengrab taken on November 9, 2014 from a Boko Haram video released by the Nigerian Islamist extremist group Boko Haram and obtained by AFP shows Boko Haram fighters parading on a tank in an unidentified town. AFP PHOTO
YAOUNDE
Nigerian Islamist
extremists Boko Haram are intensifying attacks in neighbouring Cameroon,
targeting new villages with increasingly sophisticated weapons, as the
army fears more violence in the approaching dry season.
“We’re
convinced that the establishment of a 'caliphate’ (by Boko Haram) is
aimed not only at Nigeria but also at Cameroon,” Leopold Nlate Ebale,
commander for an elite battalion in the border zone, told AFP.
Until
recently, Boko Haram had focused its attacks on several Cameroonian
border posts across from towns it controls in the Nigerian state of
Borno.
It has also been using Cameroon as a place to rest and stock up with arms and food.
But its attacks are now spreading further south into the country.
Members
of the group have slit the throats of market-goers in broad daylight
near the northern city of Mokolo, according to Cameroon’s army.
Meanwhile, rivers between the west African nations are evaporating as the dry season approaches.
Dry
weather “will increase Boko Haram’s capacity for harm,” said colonel
Jacob Kodji, a regional army chief in northern Cameroon.
“They
will no longer have to cross over bridges. They will be able to cross
anywhere over the border, at any time, by any means.”
ROCKET LAUNCHERS
The
Islamists have taken some 20 towns in Nigeria and amassed a weapons
stockpile seized from Nigerian army bases. They now use armoured
vehicles, landmines and rocket launchers. (AFP)
as well as kalashnikovs and rocket launchers.
Cameroon’s
military is increasingly concerned as Boko Haram fighters approach
major cities like Maroua, the capital of the Far North region, which the
group is suspected of infiltrating.
Cameroon has deployed around 2,000 soldiers in the northern region and registered 32 deaths since the start of the operation.
Despite the losses, the government says its soldiers are beating back the Islamists.
The
authorities regularly announce the killing of hundreds of Islamists
during skirmishes, though it is impossible to verify the figures.
Cameroon
has some 4,000 elite soldiers, trained by Israeli soldiers, but
observers are sceptical about the capabilities of the regular army,
particularly in the face of bigger attacks.
“Until now,
the military presence has endured major skirmishes. But if Boko Haram
decided to launch a major offensive, they could break through Cameroon’s
lines without too much difficulty,” said a source close to the
country’s intelligence services, requesting anonymity.
RECRUITS
The
army’s successes up to now were partly due to the fact that the
insurgents were sending young, inexperienced recruits to Cameroon,
rather than hardened fighters from Nigeria, he said.
“The
Boko Haram fighters we’re dealing with are trained in three weeks: the
first week they’re given money and drugs, the second week they learn to
put together and strip down a kalashnikov, and the third, they’re sent
to the frontline,” said a Cameroonian officer, declining to be named.
The army, initially criticised for its inaction, also feels increasingly isolated in its fight against the Islamist group.
Hundreds
of Nigerian soldiers have fled to Cameroon on several occasions in
response to Boko Haram attacks, yet the two countries “share information
but nothing more”, according to Cameroon’s defence ministry.
A
regional force — with 700 soldiers each from Chad, Cameroon, Niger and
Nigeria — is due to be deployed by the end of November, but will mainly
concentrate on the area around Lake Chad, in the far north of both
countries.
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