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HELL ON EARTH IN BORNO: Boko Haram Launches Coordinated Massacre on Military Base and Refugee Camp, Leaving Trail of Blood and Terror. The northeast is once again drenched in grief. In one of the most chilling and audacious attacks in recent memory, Boko Haram terrorists descended on a military base and an Internally Displaced Persons camp in Borno State, leaving behind a horrifying scene of death, destruction, and despair. Soldiers and civilians alike are feared dead, and the full extent of the carnage is still being counted.This was not a random strike. This was calculated. This was coordinated. And this was cold-blooded.Reports filtering out of the troubled northeast paint a picture so grim it is difficult to fully absorb. Armed insurgents stormed the military installation with devastating firepower, catching security forces off guard in what appears to have been a well-planned offensive. But if attacking a military base was brazen, what happened next was simply monstrous — the terrorists turned their guns on an IDP camp, a settlement filled with some of Nigeria’s most vulnerable people. Women who had already lost husbands. Children who had already lost homes. Families who had survived previous Boko Haram attacks only to be hunted down again.Let that sink in. These are people who fled Boko Haram — and Boko Haram followed them.The death toll, though not yet officially confirmed, is feared to be significant. Multiple soldiers are reported among the casualties, a painful reminder that the men and women fighting this insurgency do so at enormous personal cost. But the civilian deaths — if confirmed — will once again raise the most uncomfortable questions about the state of security in Nigeria’s northeast, a region that has endured over a decade of this nightmare with no clear end in sight.For years, Nigerians have been told that Boko Haram has been “technically defeated.” For years, the northeast has continued to bleed. Today’s attack is not just a security failure — it is a humanitarian catastrophe unfolding in slow motion, in a region the rest of the country too often forgets.