2015-02-23 17:28
Lagos - At least 36 mourners at a funeral ceremony were killed
and 27 wounded when an unidentified plane bombarded a village in Niger
near the Nigerian border, the army said Wednesday.
The strike on
Tuesday came as Niger takes part in a regional offensive against
Nigeria-based Boko Haram fighters, who have extended their brutal
six-year insurgency to Niger, Chad and Cameroon. A Niger army report
obtained by AFP that gave the death toll said the plane’s “origins
remained undetermined.”
“The
victims were residents attending a mourning ceremony for a prefecture
official,” said a humanitarian source, who added that the attack was
near the mosque in Abadam. Nigeria denied all responsibility for the air
strike despite a claim it was involved. Meanwhile seven villagers in
far north Cameroon were killed Tuesday when battling Boko Haram fighters
who stole 70 cows and torched houses in Gaboua.
Nine
militants also died in the clashes against the locals, armed with
clubs, machetes and bows and arrows. A spokesman for Nigeria’s air
force, Air Commodore Dele Alonge, denied all responsibilty for the 36
deaths in Abadam.
“It’s not to my knowledge and there has not
been any report from our people of such an incident,” he said. However,
at least one local leader blamed Nigeria.
“At first we thought it
was a blunder by Chad or Niger’s army, but now we suspect the Nigerian
army is responsible,” said an elected leader from Bosso in Niger, which
is about 10 kilometres (six miles) from Abadam.
The leader said a similar air strike several days ago on the nearby village of Gamgara killed one person.
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