Nigerians fleeing besieged city seek Cameroon refuge

A woman and her daughter arrive Wednesday to seek refuge at a school in Maiduguri, Nigeria, after fleeing Islamic militants who attacked their home city of Bama in northeastern Nigeria.
A woman and her daughter arrive Wednesday to seek refuge at a school in Maiduguri, Nigeria, after fleeing Islamic militants who attacked their home city of Bama in northeastern Nigeria.

MAIDUGURI, Nigeria -- Thousands of refugees are fleeing northeast Nigeria into Cameroon, the United Nations refugee agency reported Wednesday, as extremists pursue a new strategy to hold land they are calling an "Islamic caliphate," or state ruled by Islamic law.

Hundreds of Cameroonians also have been abandoning their homes since Nigerian Islamic extremists last week began attacking villages in the neighboring country, said Helene Caux, spokesman for the U.N. high commissioner for refugees.

In one instance, Boko Haram fighters slit the throats of three people found in a Catholic Church in the Cameroonian village of Assighassia, she said. That also is a new tactic for Boko Haram, which previously had only kidnapped Cameroonians for ransom.

More than 10,000 Nigerians have crossed into Cameroon and Niger since last week, Caux said. Another 1,700 Cameroonians have fled their homes near the border to move farther inland, she said.

Cameroon is hosting about 39,000 Nigerian refugees and Niger some 50,000, in addition to an estimated 645,000 Nigerians displaced within the country by the Islamic insurgency, according to U.N. figures.

The most recent influx of Nigerians to Cameroon comes from Bama, the second-largest city in Nigeria's northeast Borno state. The state government on Tuesday said Bama has not fallen to Boko Haram, denying reports from some residents and security officials that the city has been seized by the extremists.

Borno state Deputy Gov. Zannah Umar Mustapha called for calm in a statewide broadcast, denying that Boko Haram had taken the city and might be heading for Maiduguri, the state capital.

The civilian volunteer force fighting Boko Haram also denied that Bama had fallen, with spokesman Jubrin Gunda saying the military fought off the group's attack.

Borno Sen. Ali Ndume said the situation remained confused, with reports conflicting. He said a Nigerian air force bombing raid against militants who had seized the military barracks in Bama was bungled. The attack took place after soldiers had dislodged the rebels, killing troops and civilians who had sought shelter at the barracks, Ndume said.

Only those who are too old or sick to move remain in Bama, which had a population of about 200,000, he said.

"The military is claiming that they have repelled the insurgents, but the fact is that whether that is true or not, people are fleeing Bama in the hundreds," with some leaving on foot, he said Tuesday.

Taking Bama would open the way for the extremists to attack Maiduguri, the city 45 miles away that also is the headquarters of the Nigerian military's campaign to contain Boko Haram. As fears grew of an attack on that city, the military this week extended the curfew in Maiduguri, ordering people to remain in their homes from 7 p.m. to 6 a.m.

The military did not comment officially, but Defense Ministry spokesman Maj. Gen. Chris Olukolade posted a tweet Wednesday quoting the state government saying "Bama is not in the hands of terrorists; situation in the region is being contained."

A Section on 09/04/2014

Upcoming Events