News

Troops Repel ISWAP Attack In Borno, Kill 12 Near Cameroon Border

Claudia Kane
· · 2 min read
Share:
borno-kirawa-troops

Nigerian troops have repelled an attempted overnight assault on a military position in Kirawa, Borno State, killing 12 suspected Boko Haram and ISWAP fighters near the Nigeria-Cameroon border.

Reports by PRNigeria and TheCable said the attack happened late Thursday into Friday around the Kirawa axis, where troops of the 153 Task Force Battalion under Operation Hadin Kai were holding a forward position as part of Operation Desert Sanity and related siege operations.

The location matters. Kirawa sits close to the Cameroon border, an area insurgents have repeatedly tried to use for movement, escape and regrouping. A successful breach there would have put both military positions and nearby communities under fresh pressure.

Attack stopped near the border

According to the reports, the attackers tried to advance from the Cameroon side but were detected before they could overrun the military position. Troops, backed by local security forces, responded with heavy fire and forced the fighters into retreat.

By the end of the gun battle, 12 attackers were confirmed killed. Several others were said to have escaped with gunshot wounds, while one soldier was reported wounded in action. The reports also said no troop equipment was lost during the exchange.

That last detail is not small. In past attacks on remote bases, insurgents have often tried to seize weapons, vehicles and ammunition after overrunning positions. This time, the troops held the line and prevented that kind of loss.

Weapons recovered as pursuit continues

Items recovered from the scene included AK-47 rifles, rocket-propelled grenade components, ammunition and a PKT machine gun. Military sources said follow-up exploitation operations were still ongoing in the area to track fleeing fighters and stop them from regrouping.

The latest clash comes only days after renewed attention on counter-insurgency operations in the North-East, especially around Borno and the Lake Chad axis. It also shows why border communities remain sensitive even when the military records major wins elsewhere.

For residents, the immediate takeaway is that the attack was stopped before it could spread. For security forces, the harder work is the pursuit phase: finding the wounded fighters, cutting off escape routes, and making sure the same group does not circle back toward another soft target.

Sources: PRNigeria, TheCable

Share:

Written by

Claudia Kane

General assignment reporter and News Editor at NaijaTrend. Covers breaking news, security, and national affairs across Nigeria.

Leave a Comment

Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like