The atrocities near Monguno in the northeastern state of Borno took the death toll since Muhammau Buhari became president in late May to more than 625, according to an AFP count.
Buhari on Monday further signalled his intent to crush the six-year Islamist uprising by sacking the entire military high command that oversaw the Islamists’ rise in strength last year. The latest raids happened late last Friday.
On Monday, a suicide bomber blew himself up in the Borno state capital, Maiduguri, a day after the first suicide attack in northern Cameroon that killed at least 11.
In another sign of the rebels’ threat to regional security, a suicide bomber disguised as a woman in a full-face veil blew himself up in Chad’s capital, N’Djamena, on Saturday, killing 15.
Area hit before
Sheriff Kulo, from Kilwa, said militant fighters stormed his village late on Friday night, killing residents before stealing food and cattle then burning down homes.
“In Kilwa alone, they killed seven people, including the village head and left one seriously injured with a fracture on his leg,” he added.
“They then proceeded to Gwollam, Misala and Magaram, where they did the same thing. In all they killed 43,” he told newsmen from Maiduguri, where he fled to raise the alarm.
“They opened fire on residents and in some cases they used knives to slaughter their victims.”
There was no independent corroboration of his toll but the Borno state police commissioner, Aderemi Padokun, said: “From what we heard, the gunmen raided these villages. “They shot dead their victims and in some cases slit their throats.
They also carted away foodstuffs and livestock.
“We don’t have details of the actual number of people killed in the attack but I can confirm it happened.” Boko Haram mounted a similar raid on a nearby village in the Monguno area on July 1, killing 48 people."
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