A town in northeast Nigeria where Boko Haram is believed to have kidnapped scores of schoolgirls was vulnerable to attack because of a lack of security, residents said yesterday.
Terrified pupils fled the school in Dapchi, Yobe state, on Monday night when heavily armed fighters stormed the town in a convoy of pickup trucks.
Nigeria’s government has been unable to confirm the number of missing girls, which has revived memories of the mass abduction of more than 200 girls in Chibok in April 2014. A teacher at the school, Amsani Alilawan, said there were soldiers in Dapchi until last month but they were then redeployed.
“One month back, they carry (take away) all soldiers, they transferred them to another side, they leave us without security,” he said.
When the suspected Boko Haram fighters arrived “there was no soldier in the town”, he added.”We had policemen but they ran to the bush.”
Mohamed Adam, whose two younger sisters are missing, said before Monday’s attack “there was almost no security inside Dapchi because there have been no other incidents.
“No soldiers were in the town for over one month,” he added.
“The town is now in a very crazy condition because most of the parents are still going back to the school and crying for their loved ones.”
The attack has again raised questions about Nigeria’s ability to secure hard-to-reach rural areas in the remote region and its repeated claims that Boko Haram is on the verge of defeat.Nigeria’s defence spokesman John Agim denied that troops were withdrawn from the town.
“The location where the soldiers are stationed is between 30 to 40 kilometres from the school,” he said.
“When they heard about it, by the time they moved in, this thing had already happened.”
Schools, particularly those with a secular curriculum, have been targeted by Boko Haram, whose name roughly translates from Hausa as “Western education is forbidden”. But Agim said troops cannot protect every school in the northeast.

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