Boko Haram overruns a village in pickup trucks, shooting at men. The
insurgents douse houses with gasoline and set them on fire. They round
up women, girls and boys and kidnap them
News takes days to get out, since telecommunications towers had been
destroyed.
Kano, Nigeria (CNN) -- Boko Haram
insurgents kidnapped at least 185 women and children, and killed 32
people in a raid in northeastern Nigeria this week, local officials and
residents said.
Gunmen in pickup trucks attacked the village of Gumsuri, just north
of Chibok, on Sunday, shooting down men before herding women and
children together.
"They gathered the women and children and took them away in trucks
after burning most of the village with petrol bombs," a local government
official said on condition anonymity for fear of reprisal.
News of the attack took four days
to emerge because of a lack of communication. Telecommunications towers
in the region had been disabled in previous attacks.
Local officials learned of the attack from residents who fled to
Maiduguri, the capital of Borno state, where the officials had moved a
year ago to escape Boko Haram attacks.
The militants stormed the village from two directions, overwhelming
local vigilantes who had repelled Boko Haram attacks over the course of
the year, said Gumsuri resident Umar Ari, who trekked for four days to
Maiduguri.
"They destroyed almost half the village and took away 185 women, girls and boys," Ari said.
Resident Modu Kalli said the militants fired heavy machine guns on
the village and poured canisters of gasoline on houses before setting
them on fire.
"We lost everything in the attack. I escaped with nothing, save the clothes I have on me," Kalli said.
Hundreds of residents of Gumsuri continue to arrive in Maiduguri,
which has been struggling to accommodate thousands of residents fleeing
towns and villages overrun by Boko Haram.
Campaign of violence
Boko Haram has terrorized northern Nigeria regularly since 2009, attacking police, schools, churches and civilians, and bombing government buildings.
This month, at least one female Boko Haram suicide bomber killed five
people in Maiduguri. Last month, suicide bombings killed nearly 180
people. More than half of the victims died in an attack on a mosque that
many suspect Boko Haram was behind.
The group has targeted mainstream Islam, saying that it does not
represent the interests of Nigeria's 80 million Muslims and that it
perverts Islam.
In April, Boko Haram militants drew international condemnation when
they kidnapped more than 200 schoolgirls, many of whom they later said
they sold into slavery.
At least 5,000 people have died at Boko Haram's hands, according to a
U.S. Congressional Research Service report, making it one of the
world's deadliest terrorist organizations.
Source:
Aminu Abubakr wrote from Kano; CNN's Ben Brumfield wrote in Atlanta.
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