The Nigerian military took us to towns taken back from Boko Haram in the north-east.
Some are almost impossible to reach by road because the insurgents have blown up bridges.
From
 one town to another, Boko Haram fighters have left their imprint of 
destruction - the charred remains of market places, homes, government 
buildings and farms.
Signboards have been painted over in black and replaced with Boko Haram insignia and inscriptions in Arabic.
"Thank
 you! Thank you!" a group of women chant as they praise the soldiers who
 reclaimed their town, Doron Baga, from Boko Haram.
They are the few people we found in the area. Most others fled after possibly the worst insurgent attack yet in the region.
It
 has been suggested that during the January attack, Boko Haram killed 
hundreds, possibly more - and then set fire to dozens of buildings.
'Those bastards kill men'
Now the town is deserted. At the main market area, blackened-out shells have replaced what would have been busy shops.
Mangled
 motorcycles litter the streets, their tyres blown out. Decomposing 
bodies lie by the roadside and fill the air with the stench of death. 
A group of women take shade under a tree away from the scorching heat. "Boko Haram fighters killed my sister," one tells me.
"We
 attempted to leave three times for Maiduguri but the militants 
threatened to shoot us. They hardly fed us and we were very hungry. But 
when the soldiers liberated us, they gave us some food."
Despite 
the successes of the military, many of the reclaimed towns are empty. 
Only small groups of women, children and the elderly can be found.
Abubakar
 Ali is one of the few young men around. He had a fractured leg and 
could not run away when insurgents attacked Monguno town.
"My 
grandmother hid me under the bed," he says. "They don't touch women, 
especially old women, but those bastards kill men. They came searching 
but they didn't find any man in the house so they left."
Even Mubi town, a major commercial centre in Adamawa State, is largely deserted, except for the troops on patrol.
"I
 would plead with the people of Mubi," says the town's traditional 
Muslim leader, Emir Abubakar Ahmadu. "Come back home so that we develop 
Mubi more than ever before."
With widespread destruction, the 
region is in need of massive rehabilitation - far more than what the 
residents can do on their own if they return.
There are murmurings 
within the military that soldiers have been left to do the work other 
government agencies should be taking on.
There is also the question 
of whether the people should return to restore a semblance of normality 
or whether they should remain displaced until the military completes its
 operations.
There are regular reports of troops getting killed or maimed by mines planted by the insurgents. 
Boko
 Haram fighters are known to surround their locations with hidden bombs.
 Some soldiers showed me a stretch of about 20m (60ft) where they say 
they detected 29 improvised explosive devices.
The army says such dirty tactics complicate the fight. This has not dampened the spirits of the troops.
They
 have recorded major successes recently, reclaiming many of the towns 
taken by the militants. This has elicited as much praise as it has 
criticism over why it took so long to act.
The military's gains were achieved in just a few weeks, while Boko Haram has been tormenting the region for the past six years.
The successes also came when Chad, Niger and Cameroon joined in the fight against the Islamist insurgents.
The subsequent plaudits these neighbours received proved embarrassing for Nigeria, the outshined regional powerhouse.
Nigeria's
 military spokesman, Maj Gen Chris Olukolade, denied reports of tension 
between members of the anti-Boko Haram coalition.
"Many of the 
opinions out there that seem not to be complimentary about participating
 colleagues are definitely not the positions of the countries," he said.
"They are positions of individual officials. We don't expect it to affect the co-ordination within the force."
At the Multinational Joint Task Force base in Baga near Lake Chad, only Nigerian troops are present.
They
 seem motivated, regardless of the problems at the diplomatic level. The
 soldiers promise not to let Nigeria lose its territory under their 
watch.
With new supplies of equipment, as well as fresh combat strategies from their superiors, morale is high on the frontline. 
Source : http://m.bbc.com/news/world-africa-31902549
Pics: 1 The main market in Baga is now empty and scarred by fire
2 A view of Mubi from above reveals a town without residents
3 Signs - such as this one in the town of Michika - were painted over by Boko Haram fighters
4 The militants left behind a makeshift camp in Buni Yadi
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