The United Nations Refugee Agency (UNCHR)has said that about 60,000 residents of Damasak in Mobbar Local Government Area of Borno State have been displaced in the aftermath of Wednesday’s attack on the town by terrorists.
No fewer than 18 persons, including a senior commander of the Islamic State of the West Africa Province (ISWAP) Bukar Gana Fitchmeram a.k.a. Abu Aisha were killed during the attack while 21 people were injured.
The agency said as many as 65,000 people had fled the town following a series of terror attacks,adding that most of the villagers fled towards the state capital Maiduguri and other nearby towns
Fighters from ISWAP stormed the town three times in a week to strike a military garrison, burning homes and a UN office and killing people.
In the latest violence, the terrorists attacked an army garrison before being forced back into the town itself, military sources and residents said.
“Following the latest attack on Wednesday 14 April, the third in seven days, up to 80 per cent of the town’s population — which includes the local community and internally displaced people — were forced to flee,” UNHCR spokesman Babar Baloch, said.
He added: “Due to insecurity, however, humanitarian access is increasingly challenging in many parts of Nigeria’s Borno State, including for UNHCR staff, who were forced to temporarily relocate out of Damasak in the past seven days.
“Assailants looted and burned down private homes, warehouses of humanitarian agencies, a police station, a clinic, and also a UNHCR facility.
“The situation on the ground is extremely critical,” he said. “If this continues, it will be impossible – maybe for longer periods of time – for us to deliver aid to people who desperately need it.”
There are “very worrying” reports of clashes between insurgent groups and Nigeria’s armed forces, spokesman Jens Laerke of the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, (OCHA) said.
Armed groups have been attacking humanitarian facilities and at times conducting house-to-house searches, reportedly looking for civilian aid workers, he said.
Most humanitarian aid operations have been suspended in the area since Sunday because of the insecurity, Laerke said.
At least four people, including a soldier, were killed in an attack on Monday. The UN said eight others were killed Wednesday, while locals said 10 bodies were buried and 20 people were injured.
ISWAP, which split from the jihadist group Boko Haram in 2016, has been attacking soldiers and bases while killing and kidnapping civilians.