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Ding-dong battle, as Marte falls to B’Haram again

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While soldiers tried to dislodge the Boko Haram insurgents from their Sambisa Forest base, the terrorists stuck at Marte a border town in Borno State along the shores of Lake Chad.

According to Imamu Habeeb, a local community leader who spoke from Maiduguri, “The terrorists, numbering over 2,000, appeared from various directions on Thursday and engaged the soldiers in Kirenowa town and adjoining communities in Marte.

“They fought with soldiers over the night and the fight continued today (Friday), forcing hundreds of soldiers to flee,” he added.

Local fighter Shehu Dan Baiwa said the more than 2,000 fighters had been armed with bombs and tanks.

“They used the weapons without restraint and succeeded in killing several people,” he said.

This is the third time Boko Haram has seized control of Marte, a key battleground of their six-year insurgency, which has killed more than 13,000 and left 1.5 million persons homeless.

The city is among several retaken in recent weeks by Nigeria’s military, which has launched an offensive against the Islamists as part of a regional operation supported by Chad, Cameroon and Niger.

But Boko Haram have been fighting back, and unconfirmed reports said the soldiers were forced to retreat from Boko Haram’s Sambisa Forest stronghold this week after a landmine blast killed one soldier and three vigilantes.

A senior local politician confirmed, on condition of anonymity, that the insurgents had retaken Marte.

“We lost many (people) because some of our people that fled to Chad and Cameroon have returned after troops recovered the town recently,” he added.
A senior military official confirmed the attack on Marte, but refused to say whether Boko Haram had retaken the town, describing the army’s retreat as “strategic”.

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