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Dozens of Nigerians killed in Boko Haram attack earlier this week, Amnesty says

Boko Haram has killed at least 60 people in a "devastating" attack on the northeastern Nigeria border town of Rann, Amnesty International said Friday, calling it one of the deadliest assaults by the extremist group in its nearly decade-long insurgency.

Aid groups says tens of thousands have fled northeast Nigeria to Chad, Cameroon

Displaced women are shown at a camp in northeastern Nigeria on July 29, 2017, after an earlier attack near Rann. Fighters on motorcycles drove through Rann on Monday morning, setting houses on fire and killing people left behind, Amnesty International said Friday. (Stefan Heunis/AFP/Getty Images)

Boko Haram has killed at least 60 people in a "devastating" attack on the northeastern Nigeria border town of Rann, Amnesty International said Friday, calling it one of the deadliest assaults by the extremist group in its nearly decade-long insurgency.

Fighters on motorcycles drove through the town near the Cameroon border on Monday morning, setting houses on fire and killing people left behind, the international rights group said in a series of Twitter posts. The fighters also chased residents fleeing the "massive attack" and killed several outside town.

Amnesty published satellite imagery that it said showed "hundreds of burned structures." Many likely served as shelters for displaced people who had arrived in recent months seeking protection. Most of Rann is "now destroyed," the group said.

The attack came as Nigeria faces what it has called an extremist resurgence, posing a serious challenge for President Muhammadu Buhari as he seeks re-election in two weeks' time. His administration once claimed Boko Haram had been "crushed" or "technically defeated," while the military has faced questions over low morale and support.

Rann also was attacked in mid-January, sending at least 9,000 people fleeing to Cameroon, according to aid agencies. More than 30,000 joined them across the border in late January, the United Nations refugee agency said. Thousands more fled to nearby Chad, it said.

"Many people were in a state of shock and were clearly distressed by what they had witnessed. Now they have lost all that they have and need absolutely everything," Hugues Robert, Nigeria program director for Doctors Without Borders, said following the mid-January attack.

'Like a grave yard'

A nurse with the medical charity said the normally bustling town was "like a graveyard" following that attack. "There was still smoke drifting in the sky, and the fires were still burning in places," Isa Sadq Bwala said. "All that's left are piles of ashes."

Far-flung Rann has played a tragic role in Nigeria's fight against Boko Haram. In January 2017, Nigeria's air force mistakenly launched an airstrike on a refugee camp in the town because it said the camp was not appropriately marked as a humanitarian base on its maps. Officials and community leaders said between 100 and 236 people were killed.

In March 2018, three workers for UN agencies were among 11 people killed in a Boko Haram attack on a military base in Rann.

Three health workers were abducted. Two have since been killed despite urgent pleas from the aid community to spare their lives.