Boko Haram Attacks Kirawa, Kills At Least 4, Displaces Hundreds
Boko Haram stormed the military barracks in Kirawa, a border community in Borno State, exchanging gunfire with soldiers, destroying facilities, and setting military equipment ablaze. The terrorists abducted a teenage girl and burned civilian property, including trucks and houses, leaving widespread destruction and forcing hundreds of families to flee.

Boko Haram launched a four-hour assault on Kirawa, a border community in Gwoza Local Government Area of Borno State, northeastern Nigeria, on Saturday night, Aug. 7, displacing hundreds and leaving a trail of destruction.
Buba Aji, a schoolteacher at Kirawa Central Primary School, had just settled in for a quiet evening with his family. After dinner, they all retired to bed. The beginning of the night was marked by the usual rainy-season chorus of croaking frogs and deep silence. But at about 9 p.m., Buba began to hear distant gunfire. Thirty minutes later, the sounds grew louder and closer.
“Before we knew it, the entire town was filled with the sounds of heavy blasts and gunfire. We could clearly distinguish the exchange of shots between Boko Haram and the soldiers at the barracks. That’s when we knew it was an attack,” he recalled.
Like many residents, Buba fled with his family toward the border between Kirawa and Kerawa in Cameroon, joining hundreds of others fleeing their homes. “It was chaotic, we could see Cameroonian soldiers and members of the Multinational Joint Task Force (MNJTF) driving in to take positions,” Buba told HumAngle.
While some families crossed into Cameroon, others remained at the border gate, seeking safety alongside some of the military personnel. Locals who spoke to HumAngle said that the Boko Haram fighters set fire to the house of the community head, looted properties, and burned civilian trucks and homes during the raid. At the MNJTF post, where the fierce battle took place, some military facilities and vehicles were set ablaze or damaged.
Amid the chaos, they abducted a teenage girl, Aisha Mohammed Aja. She recently completed her Junior Secondary School examinations and was awaiting her results.

Local sources reported that four soldiers were killed in the attack and that no residents died, but HumAngle has been unable to verify this with local authorities.
Kirawa has endured repeated Boko Haram attacks since it was first overrun in August 2014, forcing residents to flee to Cameroon and other parts of Borno. After residents were repatriated in 2022, the community has suffered multiple attacks this year alone, including deadly raids in February and July. Each attack follows a similar pattern, targeting both military and civilians.
Last year, HumAngle reported extensively on the unsettling realities facing displaced families resettled in Kirawa, who, even a year after their return, continue to face insecurity, poverty, government neglect, and continued displacement.
Boko Haram attacked the Kirawa community in northeastern Nigeria’s Borno State on August 7, displacing hundreds and causing destruction over a four-hour assault. Residents, like schoolteacher Buba Aji, fled towards the Cameroon border amid chaos and gunfire exchanges between militants and soldiers. During the attack, Boko Haram fighters burned homes, looted properties, and abducted a teenage girl named Aisha Mohammed Aja, while reportedly killing four soldiers.
Kirawa, repeatedly targeted by Boko Haram since first being overrun in 2014, has suffered numerous raids even after residents were repatriated in 2022, leaving the community in ongoing insecurity. Residents have faced a pattern of attacks affecting both military and civilians, highlighting issues of poverty, government neglect, and recurring displacement for resettled families.
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