Suspected Boko Haram militants kill 26 people in Chad attacks

By Madjiasra Nako N'DJAMENA (Reuters) - Suspected militants from the Nigerian Islamist group Boko Haram killed 26 people in night attacks on two villages on Lake Chad over the weekend, Chadian officials said. Boko Haram has stepped up assaults in recent weeks across the region in what appears to be a fight back against an offensive mounted by soldiers from Nigeria and its neighbors, Chad, Cameroon and Niger. "The two villages were attacked by surprise on Saturday and Sunday night. There were 13 dead in each attack," said a Chadian official who declined to be named. Merom village was attacked on Saturday by armed men who slit the throats of their victims and burned houses before fleeing, the source said. Other local officials gave similar accounts. Militants also attacked a group of camel herders at the village of Tiskra, cutting 13 people's throats before fleeing when guards of the village chief opened fire, the source said. Boko Haram, fighting to carve out an Islamist state in northeast Nigeria, has also launched a string of cross border raids. Most of its recent attacks have been in Nigeria but on June 15 suspected Boko Haram militants killed 34 people in two suicide blasts at police stations in Niger's capital. That attack was claimed by a group called The West Africa Province division of the Islamic State militant group, according to the SITE Intelligence monitoring service. It was not immediately clear if that was another name for Boko Haram. The leader of Islamic State, which controls tracts of Syria and Iraq, said in March it had accepted a pledge of allegiance from the Nigerian group. Last week, more than 200 people died in a string of attacks inside Nigeria, piling pressure on new President Muhammadu Buhari. (Writing by Matthew Mpoke Bigg; Editing by Andrew Heavens)