MAIDUGURI, Nigeria, Jan 20 (Reuters) - Militants attacked a
facility housing several aid groups in northeast Nigeria over
the weekend in what the U.N. warned on Monday is an escalation
in attacks specifically targeting aid workers.
It was not immediately clear which militant group was
responsible for Saturday's attack in Ngala, near the border with
Cameroon. A more than decade-long insurgency by Islamist groups
in northeast Nigeria has killed 36,000 people and left more than
7 million in need of humanitarian assistance.
Three eyewitnesses told Reuters that at least 20 displaced
people awaiting assistance were killed in the attack on the
facility, where aid workers live and provide assistance to
displaced people.
The U.N. said in a statement on Monday that its five staff
members who were there at the time were not harmed.
"I am shocked by the violence and intensity of this attack,
which is the latest of too many incidents directly targeting
humanitarian actors and the assistance we provide," U.N.
Humanitarian Coordinator Edward Kallon said.
Kallon said aid workers are increasingly targeted by
militant groups, noting that 12 were killed in 2019, double the
previous year, and two remain in captivity. On Dec. 22, unknown militants killed at least 10 people in a
convoy in northern Nigeria in an attack that sources told
Reuters targeted Christians and those associated with
international aid groups.
The Islamist insurgency began with the Boko Haram group in
2009, but an offshoot - Islamic State in West Africa Province
(ISWAP) - has in the last two years been the dominant faction.