Jihadists linked to the Islamic State group killed 14 Nigerian soldiers in an attack on an army base near northeast Nigeria’s main city, military sources said Saturday.
Two sources told AFP on condition of anonymity that fighters from the Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) group had attacked the base in Jakana on Friday evening, firing machine guns and rocket-propelled grenades.
“We lost 14 soldiers in the fight, including the commanding officer and another officer,” one source said.
Several other soldiers were missing and presumed to have either escaped or been captured by the militants, said the second source who gave the same toll.
The sources asked not to be identified as they were not authorised to speak.
The insurgents seized four trucks fitted with machine guns in the raid, the sources said.
The village and the base have repeatedly been raided by the jihadist fighters who splintered from the main Boko Haram group four years ago.
Since the split, ISWAP has intensified attacks on military targets, raiding bases and ambushing soldiers.
Military operation
On Monday, the Nigerian military began an extensive military operation against ISWAP in an area between Borno and Yobe which included Jakana.
It was not clear if the raid was in response to the military offensive.
On Friday, ISWAP claimed to have killed 30 troops when its fighters repelled an attack on their position in Doksa village in Borno’s Damboa district.
AFP could not independently verify the claim, although a military source in the region confirmed there were clashes between troops and jihadists in the area.
Security experts say ISWAP has been extending its grip and influence around Lake Chad, a vast, marshy area also shared by Niger and Chad.
In August, ISWAP abducted hundreds of people who had returned to the northeast town of Kukawa in the Lake Chad region, weeks after they had returned having fled their homes to escape violence in the region.
In other towns in the region, hundreds of people have fled to escape extortion by ISWAP. The jihadists have mounted roadblocks there, seizing mobile phones and money.
At least 36,000 people have been killed and around two million displaced in the decade-long Islamist conflict in northeast Nigeria.
The violence has spread to neighboring Niger, Cameroon and Chad, leading to the formation of a regional military force to fight the insurgents
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