A military court in Cameroon has handed down prison sentences
of up to 20 years to 14 Boko Haram members, the country’s state
broadcaster Crtv reported.
The defendants, who were arrested in March after the
discovery of a weapons cache, admitted to being part of the Nigerian
extremist group at a “public hearing” in the northern town of Maroua,
said the report.
They had been charged with the illegal possession of firearms and ammunition and of plotting an insurrection.
“Each of the Boko Haram members (was) sentenced to between 10 and 20
years” in prison, said the report, adding that the sentences cannot be
appealed.
The trial was reportedly the first of its kind in Cameroon where a
large number of members of the radical group have been arrested in the
north over the past weeks following attacks on police stations, as well
as kidnappings and killings.
The armed movement is seeking to install an extremist Islamic state in Nigeria. It started its bloody insurgency in 2009.
More than 3,000 Nigerians fleeing Boko Haram attacks have taken
refuge in the Cameroon town of Fotokol, according to a municipal
official.
“We are worried about infiltrations” by the Islamists among the refugees, a police officer in the town said.
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