BOKO HARAM: Cameroon a Victim of 80 people kidnapped.
Cameroon and Chad take the bull by the horn by joining forces to combat insurgent group Boko Haram plaguing the Northern parts of neighboring Cameroon and Nigeria. This insurgent group poses a threat to the sovereignty and trade route between Cameroon and Chad.
 A screengrab taken on July 13, 2014 from a video released by Boko Haram 
and obtained by AFP shows the leader of the Nigerian Islamist extremist 
group, Abubakar Shekau (C) (AFP Photo/)
                        
Yaounde, Cameroon (CNN)Boko
 Haram insurgents have kidnapped 80 people in northern Cameroon, 
officials said, an attack that comes as troops from neighboring Chad 
entered Cameroon to join the fight against the terrorist group. 
The
 attacks happened in the villages of Mabass and Makxy in the 
Mayo-Tsanaga Division of the Far North Region of Cameroon on Sunday 
morning, Saiid Abdulkarim, a journalist for the state broadcaster, told 
CNN. 
Three of those kidnapped were found dead, Abdulkarim said. The Cameroonian government did not immediately comment. 
Meanwhile, thousands of Chadian troops arrived in Cameroon to join that country's soldiers in the fight against Boko Haram.
The
 governor of Cameroon's Far North Region, Mijiyawa Bakary, told CNN that
 the first contingent of Chadian troops arrived in a convoy of more than
 400 vehicles, and a second wave of soldiers were expected to arrive 
soon. 
The Chadian soldiers "are coming
 in with dozens of tanks, armored vehicles and other military 
equipment," Cameroon defense ministry spokesman Col. Didier Badjeck 
said. 
The Chadian parliament unanimously voted Friday to send troops to Cameroon and Nigeria to join in the fight against Boko Haram.
The
 move comes after Cameroon's President, Paul Biya, made a strong call 
for international cooperation in the fight against Boko Haram.
Biya told diplomats recently that Boko Haram was "a global threat" that calls "for a global response."
"Such
 should be the response of the international community, including the 
African Union and our regional organizations," he said. 
Chadian officials concluded that Boko Haram also poses a danger to Chad. 
Chadian President Idriss Deby said attacks on Cameroon by the terrorist group could destroy Chad's economy.
"We
 can't remain indifferent to what is happening to our neighbors," Deby 
said. "Cameroon is the entry and exit point for Chad economically."
Much
 of what is imported to Chad comes through the Cameroonian seaport of 
Douala, and Chad's crude oil is transported through a pipeline that runs
 from southern Chad to a floating facility 11 kilometers (almost 7 
miles) off the Cameroon coast.
The presence of Chadian troops on the front could be key to reversing the gains so far made by the terrorist group. Trained
 in desert combat, Chadian forces played a critical role in fighting 
jihadists in northern Mali, where they became major allies to French 
troops in the fight against terrorists there. In fact, they were 
instrumental in the killing of some high-profile jihadists.
The
 involvement of Chadian troops marks a major shift in Cameroon-Chad 
anti-terrorism cooperation. In the past year, it focused mostly on 
securing individual borders.
While Chad
 is the first country to put boots on the ground in Cameroon, the 
international community and regional bodies are also expressing concern.
On
 Friday, the Russian ambassador to Cameroon, Nicolay Ratsiborinski, said
 his country will supply Cameroon with modern and sophisticated military
 weapons.He said the equipment will include heavy artillery, armored cars and missiles.
Michael
 Stephen Hoza, U.S. ambassador to Cameroon, also said his country would 
help train Cameroon soldiers and offer equipment for the fight.
Boko
 Haram has been staging cross-border raids on Cameroon, the latest being
 the attempt by the insurgents to take over a Cameroon military base in 
Kolofata. Cameroonian troops killed 143 of them, and lost one soldier.
On
 January 3, Boko Haram fighters briefly took over control of a military 
base in Achigashia, forcing Cameroonian soldiers to retreat and then for
 the first time use airstrikes against the insurgents.
Attacks
 on military installations mark a big shift in Boko Haram operations in 
Cameroon. Initially,they would cross the border and either attack to 
steal food or kidnap nationals and expatriates in exchange for ransoms. 
Cameroon
 has already deployed about 7,000 troops across the Far North, where 
Boko Haram has scaled up attacks over the past six months. 
Sources:
- http://edition.cnn.com/2015/01/18/africa/cameroon-chad-troops-boko-haram/index.html 
- Boko Haram/AFP/File

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