More than 100 bodies have
been found in a mass grave in northeast Nigeria after a town was reclaimed from
Boko Haram terrorists.
The bodies - many with
their throats slit and heads cut off - were found underneath a bridge in the
town of Damasak, after it was retaken earlier this month by troops from Chad
and Niger.
It is believed the victims
may have been killed more than two months ago, due to the fact the bodies were
severely decomposed.
Colonel Azem Bermandoa
Agouna said several of the victims had been decapitated, while others had been
shot.
He said: 'There are about
100 bodies spread around under the bridge just outside the town.
'There are heads here and
bodies there, the mass grave has become like a termite mound.'
He claimed the massacre probably occurred
about two months ago and added: 'This is the work of Boko Haram.'
The Islamist uprising,
which initially began as a campaign against Western education, has claimed more
than 13,000 lives since 2009.
In a recent chilling
development, the sinister group recently allied themselves with the Islamic
State terrorists in Syria and Iraq.
Chad and Niger launched an
intensive ground and air offensive against Boko Haram in the area earlier this
month, quickly reclaiming Damasak from the terrorists.
According to army source,
the militants suffered heavy losses in the push, with an estimated 200 killed
in fighting last Sunday.
Boko Haram had held the
town since last November, when they killed around 50 people and forced another
3,000 to flee, according to the UN's High Commissioner for Refugees.
The Nigerian military has been struggling for
years to stamp out the movement and President Goodluck Jonathan, who is facing
an election next weekend, has faced fierce criticism over his government's
failure to contain the violence
The presidential and
parliamentary polls were initially due in February but were postponed by the
election commission which cited security fears.
Nigeria has claimed major
recent gains against the Islamists with the help of coalition partners
Cameroon, Chad and Niger, achieving in just over one month what for years it
had failed to do on its own.
Two out of three of the
worst-hit northeast states -- Yobe and Adamawa -- have been declared 'cleared'
while the third, Borno, is expected to be liberated 'soon', the military said
this week.
Major towns such as Bama
and Dikwa are among some 36 localities recaptured, with just three said to be
still in rebel hands.
Source: DailyMail
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