Nigeria’s military said its forces Tuesday retook from Boko Haram
the economic and strategic town of Gamboru Ngala on the border with
Cameroon.
Nigerian Army Spokesman Colonel Sani Kukasheka Usman told VOA Tuesday
the operation involved the air force and army. “They gave us fire power
support, aerial bombardment and the ground troops entered,” he said.
Nigeria's President Muhammadu Buhari, who was inaugurated in May this
year, recently gave the military three months to neutralize the
Islamist insurgent group.
Usman said the recapture of Gamboru Ngala is proof the military will
be able to meet the president’s deadline, in coordination with neighbors
Cameroon, Chad, Benin and Niger, which form the joint military force.
“It is a fact of life. Today, the Nigerian army was able to capture
the strategic town of Gamboru Ngala in the northeastern part of the
country. It is so important to both the Nigerian people and of course
the insurgents themselves,” Usman said.
“There’s a renewed cooperation,
a collective responsibility not just among the Nigerian people and the
Nigerian military but the neighboring countries as well under the
auspices of the new Multinational Joint Task Force,” he added.
Usman said Gamboru Ngala forms economic links between Nigeria and
neighboring countries such as Cameroon, Niger, Chad, and Central African
Republic.
There was no independent confirmation of the military’s claims. Usman
said the military has seriously degraded Boko Haram’s ability to wage
war.
“This singular act of recapturing Gamboru Ngala has further demonstrated that Boko Haram is about to become extinct,” he said.
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