Nigerian villagers accuse Cameroon troops of killing civilians
Nigerian villagers claimed Tuesday that
Cameroonian troops in cross-border pursuit of Boko Haram Islamic
extremists shot and killed at least 40 civilians — the third such
accusation of reckless killings by the Cameroonians in recent weeks.
Muhammad
Abba, deputy commander of a civilian self-defence group, said relatives
still trapped in the border region called him to say they counted at
least 40 corpses scattered around the Gwadale border community in
northeast Nigeria after Cameroonian troops crossed the border Monday.
The first story about such slayings came
from refugees who said Cameroonian soldiers Nov. 30 killed about 150
people, stole cattle and razed entire villages along a 150-kilometre
(95-mile) stretch of the border. It came days after diplomats said
Nigerian officials refused requests from neighbouring states to evacuate
civilians and create a no-go zone along the border to prevent
incursions by the extremists.
Cameroon
has said its troops are deployed in joint operations with Nigerian
soldiers and follow strict humanitarian rules of war. Nigerian
government officials have not commented on the reports.
Abba
told The Associated Press that one of his brothers who survived said
the Cameroonians arrived in the early hours of Monday “and began to
shoot sporadically. Most of our people who ran out of their houses in
fear were killed by bullets ... corpses still litter the ground with no
one attending to them.”
He said he was worried because he hasn’t heard from his eldest son since the attack.
Abba
said survivors fled to Ashigashiya, where villagers last week accused
Cameroonian troops of indiscriminately firing rocket-propelled grenades
that killed a family of four, and then shooting and killing two elderly
men.
In a separate incident, survivors
said Boko Haram fighters killed five woodcutters Monday in Auno town
near Maiduguri, the biggest city in the northeast.
“Some had their throats slit, others died from gunshots,” said self-defence fighter Ibrahim Musa.
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