Nigeria claims Boko Haram ‘largely’ defeated




ABUJA: Nigeria’s information minister on Tuesday insisted that Boko Haram was “largely defeated” despite two days of bombings blamed on the extremist group that left dozens dead in the volatile north-east.

Lai Mohammed maintained the Nigerian government had greatly reduced the group’s capacity to attack and was on its last week.

“Boko Haram has been largely defeated. They (Boko Haram) know they are on their way out,” Mohammed told journalists in Lagos.

“They lack the capacity to launch horrendous attacks they used to do in the past. We have succeeded in dislodging them,” he said.

“Our problem now is how to resettle the internally displaced people.”

In the final days before his self-imposed deadline to stamp out the group on Dec.31 expires, Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari said that Boko Haram was “technically” defeated.

In an expected show of defiance, Boko Haram attacked a series of towns in the north of Africa’s most populous nation and biggest oil producer, calling into question Buhari’s claim that the militants weren’t capable of “conventional” attacks.

On Sunday evening, there was a spate of suicide bombings in the key city of Maiduguri, killing 21 people and injuring scores of others.

In the neighbouring state of Adamawa, 30 people were killed on Monday morning after two young women detonated explosives in a crowded market.

According to the Global Terrorism Index, a report released by the New York-based Institute for Economics and Peace, Boko Haram “has become the most deadly terrorist group in the world.”

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