The Nigeriens, who were believed to have
interrogated some of the insurgents, said Boko Haram devoted the camp
to a specialised training for the use of long range anti-tank and
anti-aircraft weapons.
Investigations revealed that the
insurgents were focusing on the use of a dangerous weapon they had
acquired, the AA 12, which is one of the world deadliest shotguns.
One of its versions could also be used to shoot down fighter aircraft.
The source said that while the insurgents had acquired the lethal weapon, they had not got the expertise to fully utilise it.
The insurgents were said to be using the
weapon “on eject role alone,” which meant shooting somebody directly
with it, without maneuvering it for other more lethal uses.
Efforts made by our correspondent to get
the details of the discovery from the Director of Defence Information,
Maj.-Gen. Chris Olukolade, were not successful as the repeated calls to
his mobile telephone line were not successful.
The discovery of the training camp
followed the arrest of 20 insurgents in Diffa, Niger Republic by the
country’s security forces on Monday.
An international news agency, Reuters,
reported that the Boko Haram members were arrested while they were
planning to attack markets and other thickly populated areas in
retaliation against Niger’s support for Nigerian’s battle against
terrorism.
Niger’s Army Chief, Gen. Seyni Garba, was quoted in the Monday’s edition of Le Sahel,
a state-owned newspaper as having said, “The bloodbath planned by the
terrorist organisation to punish our country has fortunately been
avoided.”
There had been anxiety in high security
circles over the use of ransom by the Boko Haram to acquire cheap, but
deadly weapons in circulation from the Libyan crisis.
A source said that security personnel
were of the opinion that the recurrent attacks against Nigerian villages
were being perpetrated with new arms acquired with ransom money.
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