MAIDUGURI Nigeria (Reuters) - Suspected militants from Islamist group Boko Haram shot dead 29 farm workers as they tilled their fields in remote northeast Nigeria, a police source said on Thursday, amid a mounting insurgency increasingly targeting civilians.
The attackers destroyed most of
the village of Chukku Nguddoa and wounded another 10 people on Wednesday, said
the police source in Borno state, the heart the revolt that is piling political
pressure on the government.
Boko Haram, which grabbed world
headlines last month by kidnapping more than 200 schoolgirls further north in
Borno, has stepped up its five-year-old campaign to carve an Islamic state out
of the religiously mixed oil producer.
Bomb attacks are growing more
sophisticated, including two on the capital Abuja last month, and massacres of
villagers in the area where Boko Haram is based are an almost daily occurrence.
Boko Haram initially attacked
mostly security forces, government officials and sometimes Islamic clerics who
spoke out against it.
But when President Goodluck
Jonathan ordered a military offensive a year ago to flush them out, civilians
formed vigilante groups to help out - and themselves became targets.
The mounting killings of
civilians, and the government's apparent inability to halt them, have triggered
widespread anger.
Nigerian teachers went on strike
and staged rallies nationwide on Thursday in protest against the girls'
kidnappings, as well as the killing of 173 teachers by the insurgents over the
years. [ID:nL6N0O82ZC]
A group of protesters in the
capital Abuja tried to march up to the Presidential Villa but were prevented by
a row of police.
PROTESTS, BLAME
Jonathan in an emailed statement
urged protesters to ensure their "zeal is matched with a realistic
understanding of the situation".
"When a bomb goes off in
Baghdad, the people of Iraq do not blame the government, they blame the
terrorists," he said. "When terrorists see Nigerians turn on each
other in blame it gives them a huge morale boost ... the terrorists are the
real enemy."
The ruling People's Democratic
Party (PDP) and main opposition All Progressives Congress (APC), which rules
Borno state, have blamed each other for the hostage crisis.
Jonathan and the military have been
criticised in Nigeria for the slowness of their reaction to the mass abduction,
and last week Nigeria accepted help from the United States, Britain, France and
China to find the girls.
Some of the 80 U.S. troops
deployed for a mission aiming to rescue the school girls have already arrived
in Chad, Pentagon spokesman Army Colonel Steve Warren said on Thursday.
The U.S. military has also been
flying unmanned surveillance aircraft over remote areas of northeast Nigeria
for two weeks, and last weekend the Pentagon struck an agreement to enable it
to share intelligence directly with the Nigerian government. [ID:nL1N0O71ZB]
Yet a rescue mission would be fraught with danger. Little has been said in
public about the girls' possible whereabouts or whether any negotiations are
going on behind the scenes to free them.
Militants killed 17 people in the
northeastern village of Alagarno on Tuesday and razed several houses to the
ground.
Hours earlier, a double bomb
blast in the central Nigerian city of Jos killed 118 people, according to the
emergency services, while men on motorbikes killed nine people in a raid on the
nearby village of Shawa on Monday.
While authorities suspect Boko
Haram of carrying out all these attacks, there have been no claims of
responsibility.

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