Chad's troops enter Nigeria
Chadian troops have entered Nigeria to join the battle against militant Islamist group Boko Haram.
Armoured vehicles and infantry crossed a bridge from Cameroon following air strikes and mortar attacks on Boko Haram positions, officials say.
Fighting focused on the key north-eastern town of Gamboru, Nigerian security spokesman Mike Omeri said.
The Chadian contingent of about 2,000 troops crossed the frontier without a shot being fired, AFP news agency reports from the scene.
Chad warplanes had earlier carried out air strikes for about an hour.
Chadian military sources told Reuters that their troops had clashed with the militants in Gamboru, a small town separated from Cameroon by a river and used by the militants to launch cross-border raids.
"Our troops entered Nigeria this morning. The combat is ongoing," it quotes a source as saying.
Omeri told BBC Focus on Africa that Chad's intervention signalled the "intensification" of efforts by neighbouring states to defeat Boko Haram.
"We should expect more cooperation, more collaboration and more coordination," he said.
Last week, Chadian troops reportedly moved into Malumfatori, a Nigerian town which lies near the borders of Chad and Niger, after a ground and air assault against the militants.
Chadian forces have also massed near the town of Diffa in Niger, Reuters news agency quotes military sources in Niger as saying.
Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau has threatened to create a caliphate, incorporating parts of Nigeria, Niger, Chad and Cameroon.
The African Union has responded by backing plans to establish a 7,500-strong regional force to fight the group.
Nigeria is under increasing pressure to regain territory ahead of the 14 February presidential election, amid concerns that the insurgency will prevent many Nigerians in the north-east from voting.
Boko Haram controls territory the size of Belgium, mostly in Borno state, according to Associated Press news agency.
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