Sunday, July 27, 2014

Boko Haram abducts Cameroon deputy prime minister’s wife

Cameroonian soldiers standing next to pick up trucks with mounted heavy artillery in Mora, northern Cameroon, on 17 June 2014
The Cameroonian military says members of the Nigerian militant group Boko Haram have abducted the wife of the country’s deputy prime minister in the northern Cameroonian town of Kolofata.
A local religious leader and mayor was also abducted from the same town.
Separately, at least five people in northern Nigeria were killed in a blast – residents suspect Boko Haram.
Boko Haram has stepped up cross-border attacks into Cameroon in recent weeks, as the army was deployed to the region.
Militants have kidnapped foreign nationals in northern Cameroon before, including a French family and Chinese workers.
‘Critical situation’
The wife of Deputy Prime Minister Amadou Ali and her maid were taken in “a savage attack” on his home by Boko Haram militants on Sunday, Information Minister Issa Tchiroma said 
But Mr Ali, who was breaking his fast for the Islamic holy month of Ramadan at the time of the attack, managed to escape to a neighbouring town, regional commander Col Feliz Nji Formekong told the Reuters news agency.
French hostage Georges Vandenbeusch, a French Catholic priest, disembarks from plane in Yaounde on 31 December 2013
French Catholic priest Georges Vandenbeusch was taken hostage in northern Cameroon and released over a month later
“The situation is very critical here now, and as I am talking to you, the Boko Haram elements are still in Kolofata town in a clash with our soldiers,” he added.
A local politician and his family were also abducted in a separate attack.
Meanwhile, Nigerian police say five people were killed when a bomb was thrown at worshippers as they were leaving a church in Nigeria’s main northern city of Kano on Sunday.
A young female suicide bomber also wounded five police officers as she rushed towards them and blew herself up in a separate incident, they add.
Charges
Cameroon’s long and porous border with Nigeria means Boko Haram fighters can come and go at will, attacking police stations and villages, and spreading terror throughout the region, says BBC Africa editor Mary Harper. 
The group has attacked Cameroon three times in as many days in the past week, killing at least four soldiers, Reuters reports.
Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau on 13 July 2014
Boko Haram loosely translates as “Western education is forbidden”
On Friday, more than 20 members of the militant group were jailed in Cameroon on charges of possessing illegal firearms and plotting an insurrection.
The armed group is seeking to establish an Islamists state in Nigeria.
Earlier this week, Cameroon, Nigeria, Chad and Niger agreed to form a 2,800-strong regional force to tackle Boko Haram militants.
Efforts to step up regional co-operation gained momentum after Boko Haram caused an international outcry by abducting more than 200 girls from a boarding school in north-eastern Nigeria.
The girls are thought to be held in the vast Sambisa forest, along Nigeria’s border with Cameroon.
Many Nigerian civilians in border towns have fled to Cameroon to escape from the Boko Haram attacks

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