Following a fierce encounter with Boko Haram militants in Nguro Gongon
village in Borno State, in north-eastern Nigeria, several soldiers of
the national army were reported missing. The army said that in addition
to those missing, more than a dozen of their soldiers were wounded in
clashes on Thursday (21 July). Some of the soldiers were critically
wounded.
Spokesman for the army Colonel Sani Usman said their troops attacked makeshift camps of
Boko Haram terrorists on Thursday, while they were on patrol at Guro
Gongon village and its surrounding areas to eliminate all the remaining
militants from the region. The troops reportedly recovered several
weapons from the camps, but while returning to their base they were
ambushed by the militants.
Usman, the acting director of army
public relations, said their "gallant soldiers" who were returning to
their defensive locations following their successful raid on the
militants' hideouts "ran into an ambush by a group of Boko Haram
terrorists who came to reinforce their fleeing comrades". However, the
Nigerian troops "fought back gallantly killing several of the
insurgents", the spokesman was quoted by Premium Times Nigeria as saying.
He
added that 19 soldiers and three civilian JTF members – "civilian
members" in the military squad – were wounded in the clashes while some
personnel went missing. Without mentioning the exact number of the
missing soldiers, Usman said that the army deployed a rescue team to
search for those missing.
"The wounded have been evacuated and are responding to treatment, while a
search and rescue party comprising of Special Forces personnel has
since been dispatched to establish contact with the missing in action
troops, some of whom, as at the time of filing this report, have started
returning to their defensive location," he said.
He added that the recovered weapons include a truck mounted with an
anti-aircraft gun, a Mowag armoured personnel carrier (APC), a
rocket-propelled grenade tube, one light machine gun, three AK-47 rifles
and motorcycles.
"It is pertinent to state that, no stone would
be left unturned until every person involved in the operation has been
accounted for," he noted. (WP)
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