At least ten suspected Boko Haram members faced trial on Wednesday in Chad, in connection with the twin attacks, which left over 38 people dead in the capital N’Djamena in June.
This is the first Chadian trial involving the Nigeria-based Islamist group, which has in the past months stepped up attacks and suicide bombings in Nigeria and the neighbouring countries of Cameroon, Chad and Niger.
The suspects were accused of criminal conspiracy, killings, willful destruction with explosives, fraud, illegal possessions of arms and ammunition, as well as using psychotropic substances, city prosecutor general, Bruno Mahouli said.
The closed-door hearing is expected to last for eight days.
The accused include Nigerian native Mahamat Mustapha, also known as Bana Fanaye, who according to Chadian authorities was the mastermind behind the June 15 suicide attacks that struck a school and a police building in N’Djamena, killing 38 people and injuring over 100.
Shortly after Fanaye’s arrest in late June, Chad’s top prosecutor Alghassim Kassim said the suspect was the “ringleader of a network smuggling weapons and munitions between Nigeria, Cameroon and Chad”.
Fanaye was also responsible for procuring weapons and “recruiting and managing Boko Haram members”, Kassim added.
The June attacks in the Chadian capital were followed by another suicide blast at a market in July that killed 15 people. Chad — which is part of a regional fightback against Boko Haram — has beefed up security in response to the bloodshed. The 8,700-strong force is not yet up and running. .
Comments