Abuja: At least 55 villagers were killed in three separate attacks by Boko Haram militants in Nigeria’s northeastern state of Borno, an official said.
Babagana Umara Zulum, Governor of Borno state, told Xinhua on Sunday that the attacks started on Saturday morning in Nganzai local government area of the state.
Zulum, who visited the area on Sunday to sympathize with victims, said so far 55 bodies of residents in Badu Malam Kyariri, Zawa and Lamisula Bukar Bulala villages have been found after the Boko Haram militants’ attacks, Xinhua reported.
Abbagana Ali, head of the Civilian Joint Task Force, a pro-government militia group in the area, said some of the victims were killed while conducting a funeral at a local cemetery.
Ali told Xinhua that about 26 bodies of mourners were recovered in a graveyard in Badu Malam Kyariri village, where a funeral was being held when the Boko Haram militants struck.
The militants stormed the village in five gun trucks mounted with anti-aircraft guns, he said.
Audu Liman, a resident of Zawa village said the Boko Haram militants who attacked them also burned many houses and stole foodstuffs belonging to the villagers.
“They did not spare anybody. They killed women and children here. Most of us ran with our hearts in our mouths,” said Liman while recounting his near-death experience with the gunmen.
Boko Haram, which launched attacks in Nigeria’s northeast a decade ago, is known for its agenda to maintain a virtual caliphate in the most populous African country.
According to ANI, the death toll in the suspected attack by Boko Haram terrorists on a funeral gathering over the weekend in Nigeria’s northeastern state of Borno has risen to 70.
Xinhua News Agency cited a rescue official as saying that more bodies were recovered on Sunday and Monday morning by rescue workers in the Nganzai town.