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Nigerian soldiers patrol in the north of Borno state near Maiduguri on June 5, 2013/AFP

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Nigerian army claims raid kills 150 Islamists

Nigerian soldiers patrol in the north of Borno state near Maiduguri on June 5, 2013/AFP

Nigerian soldiers patrol in the north of Borno state near Maiduguri on June 5, 2013/AFP

LAGOS september 18- A military strike on a Boko Haram camp in Nigeria’s restive northeast last week left about 150 Islamists and 16 soldiers dead, the army said Wednesday, amid reports of dozens of troops killed.

The army’s claim of a major offensive against the Islamist insurgents on September 12 came after local media reported that Boko Haram had ambushed a group of soldiers in the same area, killing 40 and leaving dozens of others missing.

Military officials were not available to comment on the reported Boko Haram ambush, speaking only about the purported military strike.

Details of last week’s military operation had not been previously made public.

“It was a highly fortified insurgent camp with heavy weapons in (northeastern) Borno State,” army spokesman Ibrahim Attahiru said, adding that the camp was in the Kasiya forest.

“The army raided the camp on September 12. Some 150 Boko Haram terrorists were killed, while the military lost 16 soldiers. Nine soldiers are still missing,” he told AFP.

The forest where the alleged raid occurred is some 70 kilometres (43 miles) northeast of Borno’s capital Maiduguri, the city where Boko Haram was founded more than a decade ago.

The area surrounding Kasiya had acquired a reputation for armed robbery.

There has been speculation that Boko Haram had strengthened its presence in the remote area in recent months, several people familiar with the region told AFP.

Borno was placed under a state of emergency in mid May, when the military shut down the mobile phone network to block Islamists from coordinating attacks amid an operation aimed at crushing the insurgency.

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With the communication network switched off, details of attacks have been slow to emerge and difficult to verify.

Residents, victims as well as local political leaders have been largely unreachable, with military statements forming the main source of information in the ongoing offensive against Boko Haram.

The military has claimed major successes in the operation, describing the insurgents as being in disarray.

There are indications that Boko Haram attacks, which were previously carried out across northern Nigeria, have been partly contained in the northeast, especially Borno state, the group’s historic stronghold.

If confirmed however, Boko Haram’s reported ambush on the military would cast doubt on claims that the insurgents’ capacity to attack has been curbed.

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