Suspected
members of Nigeria's Islamist group Boko Haram shot dead more than 20
civilians when a vigilante group attacked them in the northern Borno
state, a military spokesman said Sunday.
"The suspected
sect members came armed and fired sporadic shots that killed over twenty
innocent civilians," Haruna Mohammed Sani, spokesman for the
Multinational Joint Task Force (MNJTF) said.
The violence took place on Saturday in Dawashe village, the army lieutenant said in a statement.
He said men
from the Civilian Joint Task Force, a vigilante group formed in Boko
Haram's bastion Maiduguri to combat the Islamist gunmen who have been
terrorising the region for years, entered Dawashe to search for
suspects.
Suspected Boko
Haram members subsequently opened fire in the village, the spokesman
said, adding that the 20 victims were mostly fishermen and traders.
Sani said a
dozen other civilians sustained gunshot wounds during the incident but
provided no information on casualties among the belligerents.
The toll and circumstances of the incident could not immediately be verified independently.
The MNJTF, a joint military force set up in 1998 to combat border crimes, consists of troops from Nigeria, Chad and Niger.
Its mandate was
recently expanded to fight Boko Haram, whose insurgency is estimated to
have cost 3,600 lives since 2009, including killings by security
forces.
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