Bosso - Rotting bodies, looted buildings and a grim silence mark the
once bustling town of Bosso in southeastern Niger following one of Boko
Haram's deadliest ever attacks in the west African nation.
In the
empty, dusty streets, soldiers outnumber the few remaining residents -
including the elderly who were unable to flee the insurgents, and some
who have returned briefly to collect their possessions.
"Corpses
littered the streets," said Abdelaziz Zembada, a 50-year-old local
shopkeeper on a visit to see if it was safe to return for good.
Boko
Haram attacked a military post in town on June 3, killing 26 soldiers,
including two from neighbouring Nigeria, and a number of civilians as
well.
Everywhere, there are traces of people's rush to escape.
A
single abandoned sandal rests in the courtyard of a building. Pots,
pans and containers are scattered on the ground. Inside one
earth-and-straw home there is nothing, save a mattress and broken tea
cups.
Trucks and cars torched
Behind a sheet of
corrugated metal, a rotting goat gives off a putrid odour. A man's
unclaimed body decomposes in a local authority building. Witnesses
believe there are more undiscovered dead scattered throughout the town.
Boko
Haram's seven-year insurgency has left at least 20 000 people dead in
Nigeria and made more than 2.6 million homeless in its quest to form a
hardline Islamic state.
Extending the attacks to neighbouring
countries, the group's ascendancy has prompted a regional military
fightback involving troops from Niger, Chad and Cameroon as well as
Nigeria.
Zembada, the shopkeeper, said he and his wife managed to
whisk three of their children to safety, but a four-year-old daughter
was among those killed in the attack.
"When we came back to get
her, that's when the shell landed," he said. "My daughter was inside
with two of my neighbour's children... She hasn't been buried yet."
During
the assault the local military contingent was overrun, its barracks
looted and a handful of their armoured vehicles, trucks and cars were
torched.
In the charred ruins of their dormitory, only skeletons of beds are still identifiable.
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