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Tuesday, 10 February 2015

Car bomb explodes in Niger as Boko Haram extremists step up attacks outside Nigeria

Islamist group Boko Haram, leader Abubakar Shekau, left, makes a statement at an undisclosed location in this screen grab. AFP/ Getty Image

NIAMEY, Niger: The Nigeria-based Islamic extremist group Boko Haram escalated its attacks in neighbouring countries Monday, as a car bomb exploded in one Niger town repeatedly targeted by the extremists and residents said other fighters in Cameroon had abducted 20 people aboard a public bus.


A huge explosion rang out in the Niger town of Diffa about 3 p.m. Monday, according to Hassan Maina, who said casualties were seen being taken to a hospital. There was not immediately a toll for the attack, which was near a customs office.

Boko Haram is well known for car bombings and suicide bombings within Nigeria during its five-year insurgency, but the group had not carried out such assaults within neighbouring countries.

Monday's bombing comes as Niger's lawmakers were due to vote on a plan to send troops to help Nigeria rout the terror group blamed for 10,000 deaths over the past year. Niger, Chad, Cameroon and Benin have pledged to help Nigeria create a force with as many as 8,750 troops to fight Boko Haram.

As a result, Boko Haram has vowed to attack those countries promising to aid Nigeria.

In northern Cameroon, Boko Haram fighters seized a bus with 20 people aboard in Koza late Sunday and then drove it back toward the Nigerian border, some 18 kilometres away, resident Bouba Kaina told The Associated Press by telephone.

Early Monday, another Cameroonian town, Kolofata, was attacked by extremists who looted food and livestock. The town had recently been retaken by Chadian troops who have been helping Cameroon fight Boko Haram.

Diffa, the Niger town where the bombing went off Monday, already had seen three previous attacks since Friday by the group including an overnight gunbattle that lasted until Monday morning.

Boko Haram has scoffed at the regional effort, most recently in a video posted on YouTube by the group's leader, Abubakar Shekau.

"You are sending 7,000 of your soldiers. Why don't you send 7 million? The 7,000 is little and we can kill them step by step … Your soldiers are infidels and God's soldiers are victorious," he said.

John Campbell, an Africa policy fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, said Boko Haram's incursions into Niger and Cameroon are "marginal" and mostly centred on the goal of reconstructing the 16th century Kanem- Bornu caliphate.

"The attacks that Boko Haram has launched in Cameroon and Niger are basically in border areas that were part of the old emirate."

Mr. Campbell said the extremist group is "overwhelmingly focused" on the destruction of the Nigerian government.

"It's a Nigerian thing, not a multi-national thing," he said.

Mr. Campbell said pledges on the part of neighbouring countries to help Nigeria should be viewed with skepticism. He said international co-operation is "particularly difficult" in West Africa, with Nigeria being so much bigger than its surrounding countries and the only Anglophone country among a group of Francophone states.

With files from Allison McNeely, National Post

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