Cameroon’s
state radio reported that the country’s military has killed at least 60 Boko
Haram members who crossed over from Nigeria seeking refuge.
According
to the national radio, the heavily-armed militants, reportedly killed in the
village of Dabanga in far Northern Cameroon, crossed over from Borno State.
They were then ambushed by Cameroonian soldiers, the report said.
Fonka
Awah, governor of the far north region of Cameroon, said his office had
received information that some Boko Haram members might be hiding in
Cameroonian villages, and asked for specialized troops to be deployed.
He told
the Voice of America, VOA that the military had done a good job.
“Of course yes, without mincing words, after such a situation,
you reassemble the forces and map out strategies, you galvanize them and put
them back into action and I think that is what we have just done,” he said.
Ebenezer
Akanga, a journalist who works with Cameroon’s national broadcasting station,
told VOA in a telephone interview that if the military had carried out similar
attacks in the past, Boko Haram would not be using Cameroon as a safe haven.
“The
opinion many people have is that from the beginning, the government seemed to
have been caressing the Boko Haram, the government did not seem to have been
taking this fight very seriously.
This is
what was expected to be done from the very word ‘go.’ In fact, if the military
had this type of reaction it would have deterred the Boko Harams from crossing
to Cameroonian territory,” said Akanga, adding that security forces from
Cameroon and Nigeria should work together to eliminate Boko Haram from the two
countries.
“The
military has to adopt different strategies because it does not only suffice
chasing away the Boko Haram.
“The
fight needs to be taken to their backyard. Even if officially there may not be
agreements authorizing the Cameroonian military to cross over into Nigerian
territory, I personally think that this fight can not be won by fighting the
Boko Haram only in the Cameroonian territory.
“The
fight should be taken to their own camp out there in Nigeria.”
Last month, Cameroon and Chad both declared war on Boko Haram.
Cameroon has since deployed 2,000 troops along its border with Nigeria.
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