Weekend suicide bombings in Chad, Cameroon blamed on Boko Haram

The use of girls and women in recent suicide bombings in Nigeria, Chad, Cameroon, and Niger raises fears that Boko Haram is using kidnap victims to target countries that are helping combat the rebels.

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Gbenga Olamikan/AP Photo/File
Police collect items at the site of a bomb explosion in Nyanya outskirt of Abuja, Nigeria Oct. 3. The attack has attributes of others executed by Islamic extremist group Boko Haram, which has been accused of using girls and women in recent suicide bombings in Nigeria, Chad, Cameroon, and Niger.

Nigeria's Islamic extremist insurgents Boko Haram are blamed for using teens and women to carry out suicide bombings in neighboring Chad and Cameroon this weekend, killing more than 45 people in what Cameroon's government spokesman said is a move to spread terror as a multinational force prepares to deploy against them.

Two girls between the ages of 13 and 17 carried out suicide bombings in the northern Cameroon village of Kangeleri near Mora town on Sunday, killing at least nine and wounding 29 others, said Cameroon's Minister of Communications Issa Tchiroma Bakary.

The Cameroon explosions come after five coordinated suicide bombings in neighboring Chad on Saturday killed at least 36 people and wounded some 50 others in a village near Lake Chad that is home to thousands of Nigerians who have fled the extremists' violence. The government said a man, two women, and two children carried out the attacks.

The use of girls and women in recent suicide bombings in Nigeria, Chad, Cameroon, and Niger raises fears that Boko Haram is using kidnap victims to target countries that are helping combat the rebels.

"They have shifted their tactics. They have noticed it is impossible to face our forces, so they are now using young girls or young boys with explosives, who go more undetected, in areas they are told to go," said Mr. Bakary. He added it is difficult to know if the young girls know that they will die. "We guess that they use the girls who were kidnapped here and there, they brainwash them and use them."

A Nigerian military explosives expert has told The Associated Press that many of the bombs are remotely controlled, meaning the bomber may not know when the explosives will be detonated.

Boko Haram members are trying to spread terror, after pledging allegiance to the Islamic State group earlier this year, said Bakary.

"As a token of their commitment they have to act," he said. "This is to prove to their master how determined they are. This is the best way to receive money."

The shift also comes as Nigeria and its neighbors prepare to launch a multinational force. Earlier this year Chadian troops helped Nigerian forces drive Boko Haram out of towns and villages in northeastern Nigeria where it had set up a so-called Islamic caliphate. Boko Haram continues cross border hit-and-run attacks and suicide bombings.

Bakary called for more community self-defense groups, with people trained to neutralize the attackers, until the multinational force is fully prepared.

"Boko Haram knows their days are numbered given it will be impossible to face an army like this one, and to remain in their strongholds. We are going to take them down where they are," he said.

The multinational force, with troops from Cameroon, Chad, Nigeria, Niger, and Benin, is growing in numbers, military equipment and intelligence, Bakary said. It's a matter of weeks or months until the necessary intelligence, information and weapons are in place, he said, adding that France, the US, and China have promised to give training.

Boko Haram's six-year-old uprising has left an estimated 20,000 people dead, according to Amnesty International.

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