Nigerian army chief escapes Boko Haram ambush

1NGALA, Nigeria (AP) - Nigeria's new army chief drove to the frontline of the war on Boko Haram and narrowly missed an ambush that killed one soldier and wounded two.
2The ambushed advance team nonetheless gunned down five insurgents and arrested five on Friday's drive down the most dangerous stretch of road in Nigeria, from Maiduguri, the northeastern city where Nigeria's Islamic uprising was born, northeast to Ngala, on the Cameroon border.
3The 140-kilometer (90-mile) ride took four hours with stops, including for soldiers to check for land mines.
4An AP reporter in the 20-vehicle convoy drove past burned-out vehicles littering the road until recently controlled by the Islamic extremists.
5Weeds have overtaken villages once thriving with farmers and cattle herders.
6Army chief Lt. Gen. Tukur Buratai stopped at Mafa to tell troops of the 112 Battalion to "keep on with the good job" of forcing out the insurgents and urging them on because "there is more work to be done."
7A few kilometers down the road, soldiers with binoculars spotted insurgents hiding in a herd of cattle.
8Buratai called the convoy to a halt and soldiers arrested the militants, who said they had helped ambush the advance team.
9Buratai ordered the body of the dead soldier and his two wounded comrades be conveyed to the nearest hospital.
10Nigeria's military has said it has been plagued by leaked information from Boko Haram sympathizers in its ranks.
11Corruption has robbed soldiers of pay and equipment, a problem the country's new president, Muhammadu Buhari, has promised to remedy.
12Buhari was elected in March on a promise to crush the 6-year-old uprising that has killed 20,000 people and spilled across Nigeria's borders.
13Buratai's trip was an example of the new regimen.
14He stopped to chat with 4,000 refugees camped in Dikwa town.
15They cheered him for bringing soldiers to save them after the extremists killed five of them on Thursday night.