President Muhammadu Buhari has vowed to
crush the extremist Boko Haram movement in
Nigeria. Photograph: Mujahid Safodien/AFP/Getty
Images
Associated Press in Abuja
Wednesday 16 September 2015 02.37 BST
Nigeria’s army has said it rescued at least a dozen kidnapped
women and children held captive by the Islamist extremist
group Boko Haram.
Military spokesman Colonel Sani Kukasheka Usman said they
were freed as the army cleared Boko Haram camps on Monday
in north-eastern Borno state.
The army did not say where the women and children had been
kidnapped from or their condition.
Hundreds of hostages have been freed from Boko Haram
captivity in 2015 but none of the 219 girls abducted in April
2014 from a school in Chibok has been among those rescued.
The Nigerian extremist group has used dozens of girls and
women in recent suicide bombings in Nigeria and
neighbouring Chad, Cameroon and Niger, raising fears they
were kidnap victims.
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More than 1,000 people have been killed since President
Muhammadu Buhari was elected in March with a pledge to
annihilate the militants, whose six-year-old uprising has killed
a total of about 20,000 people. At least 2.1 million people
have been driven from their homes, some across borders.
Earlier this year troops from Chad and Nigeria drove the
extremists out of some 25 towns held for months in an area that
Boko Haram had declared an Islamic caliphate aligned with
the Islamic State group in the Middle East. The insurgents
have returned to hit-and-run attacks and suicide bombings.


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