The story appears on

Page A12

November 26, 2014

GET this page in PDF

Free for subscribers

View shopping cart

Related News

Home » World

Female suicide bomber kills at least 45 in Nigeria attack

MORE than 45 people died yesterday in twin bomb blasts, including one by a female suicide bomber, at a packed market in the Nigerian city of Maiduguri.

The explosions in the Borno state capital targeted the same Monday market area where at least 15 people died July 1 in blast blamed on the Boko Haram militant group.

Yesterday’s attack came after the militants seized control of another town in Nigeria’s restive northeast.

Health worker Dogara Shehu said he counted more than “45 people killed, some of them completely decapitated” in the Maiduguri blasts.

An official with Nigeria’s National Emergency Management Agency confirmed that “many people have been killed” but did not have an official death toll.

One senior police officer described the explosion, which happened at about 11am, as a “powerful bomb,” which was felt across the city.

Market trader Usman Babaji said the explosives were hidden in a motorized, three-wheeled rickshaw, which are popular throughout the country.

A second explosion followed moments later as people rushed to the scene of the first bombing to help the injured, witnesses said.

Abubakar Bello, who sells chickens near the scene, said the woman was carrying explosives in a wrapper on her back, in the same way that babies are carried.

“She maneuvered her way to the scene of the earlier explosion,” he said.

“I think it was a deliberate plan to inflict much pain on unsuspecting people because the second explosion went off after many people gathered at the scene of the first one.”

Boko Haram will likely be blamed for the blasts, given that it has attacked Maiduguri dozens of times during its five-year fight to create a hardline Islamist state in northern Nigeria.

The Islamist group was founded in Maiduguri more than a decade ago and the city was once the epicenter of the conflict until its fighters were pushed out into more rural parts of the northeast.

Boko Haram had earlier taken over the town of Damasak, in the far north of Borno near the border with neighboring Niger.




 

Copyright © 1999- Shanghai Daily. All rights reserved.Preferably viewed with Internet Explorer 8 or newer browsers.

沪公网安备 31010602000204号

Email this to your friend