Monday, September 15, 2025
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Nigerian militants abduct wife of Cameroon vice-PM

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YAOUNDE: Nigerian Boko Haram militants kidnapped the wife of Cameroon’s vice prime minister and killed at least three people on Monday in a cross-border attack involving more than 200 assailants in the northern town of Kolofata, Cameroon officials said.
A local religious leader, or lamido, named Seini Boukar Lamine, who is also the town’s mayor, and five members of his family were also kidnapped in a separate attack on his home.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility.
Boko Haram, an Islamist group which made international headlines with the abduction of 200 Nigerian schoolgirls in April, has stepped up cross-border attacks into Cameroon in recent weeks.
Cameroon has deployed troops to its northern region, joining international efforts to combat the militants.
‘I can confirm that the home of Vice Prime Minister Amadou Ali in Kolofata came under a savage attack from Boko Haram militants,’ government spokesman Issa Tchiroma, who is also communications minister, told Reuters by telephone. ‘They unfortunately took away his wife. They also attacked the Lamido’s residence and he was also kidnapped,’ he said, adding that at least three people were killed in the attack.
Tchiroma told a press conference later on Monday that the Cameroonian army had taken the town of Kolofata back under control after repulsing the militants, who he said had used ‘brutal and unqualified violence’.
‘We do not have all the facts in order to give full information on the exact circumstances and the victim toll of this attack,’ Tchiroma said on state television.
A Cameroon military commander in the region told Reuters security officials had taken the vice prime minister away to a neighbouring town.
He had been at home to celebrate the Muslim feast of Ramadan with his family when the attack happened.
The Sunday attack is the third Boko Haram attack in Cameroon since Friday. At least four soldiers were killed in the two previous attacks.
On Friday, some 22 suspected Boko Haram militants who had been held in Cameroon’s northern hub of Maroua since March were sentenced to prison sentences ranging from 10 to 20 years.
It was not immediately clear whether the attacks were related to the sentencing of the militants.

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