Niger’s army said Friday that 14 of its
soldiers and scores of Boko Haram fighters had been killed during a
multi-month sweep operation in the nation’s southeast.
Defence ministry spokesman Colonel
Moustapha Ledru told state television that “123 terrorists” had been
killed and “a large quantity of arms recovered from the insurgents.”
It was not possible to independently verify this number.
Ledru said 14 soldiers were killed and
29 wounded in the joint operations with Chad’s military took place
between July and September 28.
They targeted the Diffa region, which lies just across the border from the Islamists’ stronghold in northeastern Nigeria.
Ledru said the “terrorists” who had been
killed had “infiltrated” into Diffa from Nigeria, adding that two
fighters had been captured.
Boko Haram’s seven-year insurgency has
left at least 20,000 people dead in Nigeria and border areas of
neighbouring Niger, Chad and Cameroon, and made more than 2.6 million
homeless.
Attacks in Niger’s Diffa region began in February 2015.
In late July this year a multinational
force, drawn from Nigeria, Niger, Chad and Cameroon, was formed to
tackle the Islamic insurgents and clear them out of towns and villages.
Ledru said operations had led to four strategic localities being taken back from Boko Haram control.
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