Militants linked to the Islamic State (IS) group have hoisted their flag in a Nigerian town after seizing control of it, three residents have told the BBC.
Hundreds of people have fled the fishing town of Baga after the militants overran it on Wednesday night, the residents said.
The militants seized weapons from a military base, and torched a naval base on the shores of Lake Chad, they said.
The military denied Baga had fallen, saying the attack had been repelled.
But PRNigeria, an agency well-connected with the military, quoted an intelligence officer as saying that troops had made a “tactical withdrawal” from their base after coming under attack.
“The Nigerian Air Force in response to distress call quickly mobilised military aircraft and flew over 20 sorties [on] Wednesday night and throughout Thursday,” it quoted the unnamed officer as saying.
A resident, who spoke to the BBC after he fled Baga, said a militant led the morning prayer on Thursday at his mosque in the town.
Other armed militants were present at the mosque, and prayed there too, the resident said.
The militants told the congregation that civilians would not be targeted and were free to leave the town, he added.
The fighters identified themselves as being members of the Islamic State’s West Africa Province (Iswap), an IS affiliate which has distanced itself from Boko Haram, the main insurgent group in north-eastern Nigeria.
The militants had captured heavy armoured tanks, boats and a large cache of weapons during the raid on the military and naval bases, other residents said.
The military base was the local headquarters of the multinational task force, which includes troops from neighbouring states fighting the militants, the residents added.
Some troops fled with civilians, as the militants stormed the town, in north-eastern Borno state, on Wednesday night, the residents said.
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Source: BBC