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Boko Haram Ventures Out Of Nigeria, Hitting Village In Chad

An armoured vehicle used by Boko Haram militants captured by the Nigerian military in Maiduguri, Borno State, North East Nigeria, late last month. The extremist group appears to be expanding its operations into neighboring countries in an effort to establish an independent Islamic state.
EPA/Landov
An armoured vehicle used by Boko Haram militants captured by the Nigerian military in Maiduguri, Borno State, North East Nigeria, late last month. The extremist group appears to be expanding its operations into neighboring countries in an effort to establish an independent Islamic state.

Suspected Boko Haram militants have conducted their first-ever raid outside the extremist group's stronghold in northeast Nigeria, attacking a village just across the border in neighboring Chad.

Reuters says the assault took place about 12 miles east of the border at the village of Ngouboua inside Chad, which like Nigeria is a Muslim majority country with a substantial Christian minority.

The news agency says dozens of militants arrived by motorized canoe at the village on the shores of Lake Chad, which straddles the border. The assailants set houses ablaze and attacked a police station.

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"They came on board three pirogues and succeeded in killing about ten people before being pushed back by the army," a resident of Ngouboua was quoted by Reuters as saying. The town has become a veritable refugee camp for thousands fleeing the fighting in Nigeria.

Reuters says: "Militants from the Sunni jihadist group, based in northern Nigeria less than [60 miles] from the Chadian capital, have stepped up cross-border attacks in recent weeks in their campaign to carve out an Islamist emirate [around Lake Chad], which borders Nigeria, Chad, Cameroon and Niger."

According to The New York Times, Chad, Cameroon and Benin have agreed to contribute troops to an 8,700-strong force to fight Boko Haram, as fighting has "increasingly spilled across borders in the region."

The Times writes:

"Nigeria's war has spread to its smaller, poorer neighbor, Niger. In Diffa, the main city in the country's far east, just across the border from Nigeria, 'people are in a panic,' the head of the Red Cross in Diffa, Abdullai Adah, said by phone on Tuesday, after a bombing at a vegetable market and an attack on the city's prison the day before. At least eight were killed, Mr. Adah said."

Archbishop Ignatius Ayau Kaigama, who is president of the Nigerian Bishops Conference, is warning that the extremists, who kidnapped hundreds of schoolgirls last year and reportedly sold them into marriage, could affect the wider continent.

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"I'm not sure [the West understands] the magnitude of what is happening and how, gradually, this is capable of destabilizing the entire nation, the surrounding countries and, eventually, all of Africa," Kaigama said in an interview by phone with The Huffington Post. "When Africa is affected in such a manner, you can be sure that the West will feel the heat also."

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