Nigerian fighter jet strikes refugees, aid workers in Borno
A
Nigerian fighter jet misfired Tuesday during an operation, striking
refugees at a camp for the internally displaced as well as aid workers
with the International Committee of the Red Cross, according to Nigerian
officials and the Red Cross.
The
Nigerian government provided no official death toll, but an aid
organization said more than 50 people were killed at the camp in the
northeastern state of Borno.
The operation was targeting the terrorist group Boko Haram, according to the army.
Maj.
Gen. Lucky Irabor, a Nigerian army commander, said during a news
conference in Maiduguri that two soldiers were "affected" during the
operation. He did not elaborate.
There are casualties and wounded but the
actual numbers," he said, "I am yet to get the numbers of casualties of
civilians were killed."
Doctors
Without Borders condemned what it called a "large-scale attack on
vulnerable people." It said 52 people were killed and 120 more were
wounded.
The humanitarian group, which has teams in the area, called the incident "shocking and unacceptable."
"The
safety of civilians must be respected. We are urgently calling on all
parties to ensure the facilitation of medical evacuations by air or road
for survivors who are in need of emergency care," said Jean-Clément
Cabrol, Doctors Without Borders' director of operations.
The humanitarian group tweeted images of destroyed structures and several of the injured, including at least one badly wounded child receiving treatment.
Doctors
Without Borders teams are providing first aid to the wounded at their
facility in Rann, the group said. They're also preparing to treat
patients evacuated from the refugee camp.
ICRC Africa said on Twitter that six Nigerian Red Cross staffers had been killed and 13 others wounded.
Borno, which borders Cameroon, Chad and
Niger, is home to the highest population of refugees in Nigeria, the
majority displaced by fighting between government troops and insurgents,
according to the International Organization for Migration.
Of the roughly 1.8 million people displaced by conflict, 92% of them are housed in camps in Borno, Adamaw and Yobe states, that organization reported last month.
"President
(Muhammadu) Buhari condoles with families of the dead, wishes the
wounded divine succor, leading to full recovery, and sympathizes with
the Borno State government," the President said in a statement.
Correction:
An earlier version of this article incorrectly described a statement by
a Nigerian commander about casualties. The commander, Maj. Gen. Lucky
Irabor, said that two soldiers were affected. He did not say that two
soldiers had died.
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