Cameroon expels thousands of Nigerians in Boko Haram fight

Cameroon has expelled more than 3,000 Nigerians as part of the fight against Nigeria's Islamic extremists who have launched attacks across borders, officials said this week.

Suspected Boko Haram fighters disguised as refugees with explosives hidden in their luggage were arrested at a camp in northern Cameroon on Monday, Cameroon's government spokesman Issa Tchiroma Bakary said on Tuesday. Authorities have also arrested hundreds of other Cameroonians and Nigerians accused of collaborating with Boko Haram, said Midjiyawa Bakary, governor of Cameroon's Far North region.

They deported Nigerians who said they were refugees but were not staying at camps and lacked identification papers. "In the different villages, there is a certain population of foreigners and they are hiding behind some Cameroonians and hiding those Boko Haram suspects," Midjiyawa Bakary said.

Women, children and men were taken across the border to the Nigerian town of Mubi, he said. The UN refugee agency says a camp in Cameroon's Far North Region now hosts about 44,000 people and estimates there are 12,000 unregistered refugees in the region. In Nigeria, many of those expelled said they were forced out quickly. Adamawa State Emergency Management Agency chairman Haruna Hamman Furo said 12,000 Nigerians are expected to arrive from Cameroon. Everyone expelled would be sent to Yola, Adamawa's state capital, said National Emergency Management Agency Camps Coordinator in Adamawa, Sa'ad Bello. "Their condition is good," he said. But some refugees said that several people died during their hike to the border.

Boko Haram violence has killed thousands and displaced more than 1.5 million people.    (AP)

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