Several hundred people were abducted by the Islamic militants as they retreated earlier this month from Damasak in northeastern Nigeria, Mike Omeri, the Nigerian spokesman for the fight against Boko Haram, told The Associated Press. He said he could not specify how many were kidnapped but local reports say as many as 500 people were taken.
The Islamic rebels went to Damasak's primary schools and rounded up students and teachers and then retreated, said Omeri.
The soldiers who recaptured Damasak found the town largely deserted. Damasak had been held for months by Boko Haram, who used the trading town as an administrative center.
The troops from Chad and Niger who now hold Damasak have discovered evidence of a mass grave, Chad's ambassador to the UN Mahamat Zene Cherif confirmed today.
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International assistance is needed for the thousands of Nigerian refugees who have fled the violence, said the head of the UN refugee agency.
The refugee agency will funnel more resources to Cameroon, said UN High Commissioner for Refugees Antonio Guterres on Wednesday while visiting Maroua, the capital of Cameroon's Far North region. He stressed that additional assistance is needed.
"Cameroon is today not only a very important protection space for refugees, but it is in the first line of defense of the international community," he said.