A suicide bomber killed 12 worshippers at a mosque in
northern Cameroon on Wednesday, security officials said, in an area
regularly targeted by Nigeria’s Boko Haram Islamists.
The blast struck the mosque in the village of Kouyape, in
Kolofata district north near the Nigerian border, at around 5:30 am
(0430 GMT) during morning prayers, a security source said.
Since July last year Cameroon’s far north has been hit by a
series of attacks blamed on Boko Haram, which has pledged allegiance to
the Islamic State group.
“Eleven worshippers were killed at the scene. A twelfth
died of their wounds in hospital,” the security source said, adding that
the attacker was praying alongside other worshippers when he blew
himself up.
Another source close to the security services confirmed the blast killed 12 people and the bomber.
The bombing came after two people were killed overnight in
the same area in another attack blamed on Boko Haram, the security
source said.
Cameroon has beefed up its military presence along the
Nigerian border as part of a regional coalition, after years of doing
little to stop Boko Haram fighters using its territory as a rear base to
arm and equip themselves.
Since late November the Cameroon army has carried out
operations in several border areas aimed at weakening Nigerian jihadists
who have been very active in the region.
Sources say these operations have significantly weakened
Boko Haram’s capability, forcing the insurgents to turn away from direct
confrontations with the military in favour of suicide attacks.
Over the past year, Boko Haram has stepped up cross-border
attacks in Niger, Chad and Cameroon while also continuing to mount
shooting and suicide assaults on markets, mosques and other mostly
civilian targets within Nigeria itself.
The group’s six-year campaign for a hardline Islamic state
in northeast Nigeria has killed at least 17,000 people and made more
than 2.6 million others homeless.
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