Nigeria's presidency today said the country was at war with Boko Haram, apparently backing off previous claims that the Islamist rebels were on the run and desperate.
President Goodluck Jonathan's administration has been fiercely criticised over its handling of the conflict, both for its inability to stop massive attacks on defenceless civilians and for what some have described as mixed and contradictory messages on the severity of the crisis.
Jonathan has termed the ongoing military offencive in Boko Haram northeastern stronghold a success and maintained that normality will be restored to the embattled region by May.
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Today, presidency spokesman Doyin Okupe told the private Channels television station that the Boko Haram conflict was a "war situation".
"We are dealing with a very, very serious enemy," he said.
"We are engaged in a war that has been internationalised," he added in an apparent reference to Boko Haram's reported but unconfirmed presence in neighbouring countries like Cameroon.
The conflict has killed thousands since 2009 but many argue the plight of civilians in the northeast has worsened since the military began its operation in May.
Since then, nearly 300,000 people have been displaced in the region, according to the UN, and more than 1,500 people killed, according to the UN and figures compiled by AFP.
"It is very difficult, very costly in terms of lives lost. But we will overcome," Okupe said. "We are in the dying phase of this insurgency."
The defence ministry yesterday said the insurgents were "desperate" to escape Nigeria because of military pressure and would be "degraded towards elimination shortly".