The
armies of Niger and Chad have launched a “ground and air” offensive
against the Boko Haram armed group in northeastern Nigeria, a source
from the Niger government said.
“An
offensive is under way against Boko Haram,” the source told AFP news
agency. “Very early [on Sunday] morning, the troops from Niger and Chad
began an offensive against Boko Haram… in the area of Bosso and near to
Diram.”
A
resident of Diffa, located in Niger near the Nigerian border, told AFP
he saw troops headed toward the frontier early Sunday followed by the
sounds of heavy arms fire.
“After some time, the detonations grew further away, an apparent sign that the troops were moving inside Nigeria,” he said.
Privately
owned radio station Anfani, based in Diffa, reported more than 200
vehicles, including those equipped with machine guns as well as tanks,
ambulances, water tankers and transport trucks, in a convoy moving
toward the Nigerian border.
It also reported that aircraft had targeted Boko Haram positions on Saturday and early Sunday.
An
aid worker told AFP heavy arms fire was coming from the direction of
the Doutchi bridge connecting Niger to Nigeria on Sunday morning.
The
offensive comes after the African Union on Friday endorsed the creation
of a regional force of up to 10,000 men to join the fight against the
group which on Saturday pledged allegiance to the Islamic State of Iraq
and the Levant (ISIL).
The
force, the idea for which was adopted at an AU summit in January, will
be based in Chad’s capital N’Djamena, the pan-African bloc’s Peace and
Security Council said.
It
will be mandated “to prevent the spread of Boko Haram activities and
other terrorist groups” and “eradicate their presence”, the body agreed
in a meeting earlier week.
Diplomats
said Chad, Nigeria, Cameroon, Niger and Benin had committed to
providing troops, who would “operate freely” in a still-undefined
region.
On
Saturday, at least 51 people were killed and more than 100 injured
in three bombingsin the northeastern Nigerian town of Maiduguri.
Saturday’s
triple blasts were the worst attack on the city since suspected Boko
Haram fighters failed in their bid to seize it at the end of January.
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