Members of the Boko Haram Islamic sect on
Sunday bombed a bar and a brothel located near a major military base in
Mubi, Adamawa State and killed over 60 people.
Sources told saharareporters
that explosion rocked the popularly bar located at Kaban, a few
kilometres to the headquarters of the Special Operations Battalion (SOB)
of the Nigerian army in Mubi.
It was gathered that the SOB was at the
centre of the Nigerian government’s counter-offensive against Boko
Haram’s increasingly daring attacks on military and civilian targets.
Saharareporters reported that the blast occurred around 6pm at the brothel where both military and civilians used to unwind.
The agency reported that one of its sources said none of the casualties was a soldier, but another source told saharareporters that it was too early to determine whether soldiers were among the casualties or not.
Saharareporters added that
soldiers based in Mubi “frequently join civilians to eat, drink and
dance at the watering hole. It, however, added that military commanders
had warned soldiers not to stay at the joint past 4 p.m.
In recent weeks, Boko Haram has carried
out deadly attacks in the northeast Nigerian states of Adamawa, Borno
and Yobe despite the Federal Government’s declaration of a state of
emergency in the three states.
Meanwhile, security forces in Cameroon
have killed about 40 Boko Haram militants in clashes in the country’s
far north on Sunday.
Cameroon’s state radio said this on
Sunday shortly after the release of two Italian priests and a Canadian
nun suspected to have been held by the Islamist group.
A government source in Yaounde was quoted by Reuters as having confirmed the clashes which took place west of the town of Kousseri, in the region bordering Nigeria and Chad.
Cameroon, which had been criticised by
Nigeria for not doing enough to fight the Boko Haram insurgents,
deployed some 1,000 troops in the far North last week.
The two Italian priests and a Canadian
nun kidnapped in northern Cameroon nearly two months ago by suspected
Boko Haram gunmen were released on Sunday, smiling and apparently in
good health as they arrived in Yaounde, the capital.
Reuters reported that Giampaolo
Marta and Gianantonio Allegri, missionaries from the diocese of Vicenza
in northeast Italy, and Canadian Gilberte Bissiere were seized on the
night of April 4 from the parish of Maroua, close to the border with
Nigeria.
There has been no claim of responsibility
for their kidnapping but Cameroonian officials have pointed the finger
at the Nigerian Islamist group Boko Haram, which has become active in a
region that it had for some time used as a logistical base.
Reuters added that state
television in Cameroon showed images of the priests and the nun arriving
at Yaounde airport on Sunday in the company of heavily armed
Cameroonian special forces.
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