Bodies remain littered on the streets of a northern Nigerian town two
days after it was seized by militant Islamist.
Boko Haram fighters were patrolling the streets of Bama, preventing people from burying the dead, Ahmed Zanna said.
On Wednesday, the state government denied the town had fallen.
Officials said about 26,000 people had been displaced by
fighting in Bama, a key town in the battle for control of Nigeria's
north-eastern Borno state.
Earlier this week, the Nigeria Security Network (NSN)
think-tank said the group had made "lightning territorial gains" in
recent months, raising fears that the country could disintegrate like
Syria and Iraq, where the Islamic State (IS) rebel group has declared a
caliphate.
'Fought gallantly'
Boko Haram has also said it has set up a caliphate in the areas it controls - it is not clear if the two groups are allied.
Mr Zanna, a senator in Borno, said the humanitarian situation
in Bama was "terrible" and there had been a "lot of killings" in the
town.
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