Bomb Kills At Least 10 In Northeast Nigerian City
At least 10 people were killed on Saturday when a bomb
exploded in the northeast Nigerian city of Maiduguri, witnesses said, in a
region where the Islamist sect Boko Haram is pursuing a bloody insurgency. Boko Haram, whose fight for an Islamic state in northern
Nigeria has killed thousands and made the group the biggest threat to security
in Africa's top oil producer, is increasingly targeting the civilian
population.
The bomb went off at around 6 p.m. in a busy market area in
Ajilari-Gomari near the city's airport, two witnesses and a police source said. "I am at the scene now, it is very bad," local
resident Ismaila Abdulraman told Reuters by telephone. "Many men, women and children died. The fire service
are on the ground now and they are bringing corpses of people and trying to put
out the fire at the scene," Abdulraman added, saying he had already seen
10 bodies.
The final death toll was likely to be higher because dozens
of people were trapped in the rubble, the witnesses said. There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the
bombing, but Boko Haram only communicates occasionally through Internet videos,
days or weeks after attacks. The military and police did not immediately respond to
requests for official comment.
President Goodluck Jonathan started an intensified military
push to end Boko Haram's four-and-a-half year insurgency almost a year ago but
the bloodshed has not diminished. He is expected to run in a closely contested
election next year. The violence has been largely contained to Nigeria's remote
northeastern rural areas on the borders with Cameroon and Niger, far from
commercial hubs such as Lagos and Abuja, and from the southern oil fields. The
attack in the northeast's biggest city marks a setback for Jonathan's military
campaign.
"The insurgents targeted a busy area where they knew
many people usually visit in the evening for commercial activities. It appears
Boko Haram are in the city again," a policeman said, asking not to be
named. Dozens of school children were shot or burned to death in a
rural region near the northeastern city of Damaturu last week.
Insurgents killed more than 300 people last month, mostly
civilians, including in two other attacks that killed around 100 each, one in
which militants razed a village and shot panicked residents as they tried to
flee. Western governments are concerned about Nigerian groups such
as Boko Haram linking up with al Qaeda-linked cells in other countries in the
Sahel region, such as Mali, where France sent troops a year ago to oust
Islamist militants.
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