Dozens of people were killed in a spate of coordinated gun and bomb attacks in the northeastern Nigerian city of Damaturu late yesterday, leaving the city almost deserted and bodies piling up in local morgues, witnesses said today.
Suspected Boko Haram gunmen raided the city and the nearby village of Potiskum, both in northeastern Yobe state in the evening and engaged in several hours of running gun battles with security forces.
"This place was like a war zone last night. There is no single policeman on the street now, the attacks destroyed mosques and churches, I have seen many injured persons in the hospital," said Damaturu resident Benard Ogbeifun.
"There were dozens of dead bodies, and no vehicles on the road. I'm staying in my shop and praying." The attacks followed multiple bomb blasts in nearby Maiduguri, made yesterday one of the worst days of violence in the northeast since Islamist sect Boko Haram launched an insurgency against Nigerian authorities in 2009.
The fighting in Damaturu killed dozens, witnesses said. Nine security forces were amongst the dead, a military source said. Militants bombed churches, mosques and police stations.
Another witness, Umar Gambo, said he had seen several dozen dead bodies at the local morgue.
"The streets are deserted. I have lost count of dead bodies, but ... I saw at least 80 dead bodies in the mortuary. There is no high presence of security on the streets and two banks were bombed," he said. "I can't understand why all this madness."
A security source in Maiduguri, the heart of the Boko Haram insurgency, said at least seven police and two soldiers had been killed in the fighting in Damaturu. He had no figures for civilian casualties.
Reuters