A Nigerian Air Force fighter jet on a bombing
mission against Boko Haram crashed in a windstorm in the country's northeast,
killing the pilot, an official statement and a witness said.
The jet "returning to base from an interdicted
mission crashed due to bad weather and not under enemy fire”, Air Force spokesperson
Commodore Dele Alonge said in a statement issued on Saturday.
The Chinese-built Chengdu F7 went
down in a rural area of
Adamawa State, Alonge said. The crash happened in an area where Boko Haram
Islamic extremists last year shot down a military jet and beheaded its pilot.
Farmer Moses David said he watched the pilot parachute
from the plunging jet, only to ram into a tree, which killed him.
He said there was a violent windstorm when the jet hit
the ground with such force that its nose is buried.
In August, a Nigerian Air Force plane crashed into a home
in northern Kaduna city, killing all four crew and three passengers. In
November 2014, a military helicopter exploded in the northeast, killing all
three crew members.
In December 2013,
Boko Haram destroyed two helicopter gunships and three fighter jets in
northeastern Maiduguri city.
The Air Force commander reported ordering new aircraft
last year after the US confirmed it had refused to sell Nigeria attack
helicopters because of concerns about its ability to use and maintain the
aircraft, as well as the military's failure to protect civilians in the Islamic
uprising.
Nigeria's president of four months, Muhammadu Buhari, has
criticized the United States for its decision although President Barack Obama
has promised other help to end the uprising that has claimed about 20 000 lives
in six years, according to Amnesty International.
Monday, October 12, 2015
Military fighter jet crashes in northeast Nigeria war zone
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