Tag: Bombers

  • Bombers kill 40 at football viewing centre

    Bombers kill 40 at football viewing centre

    No fewer than 40 people were last night killed in a bomb blast at a football field in Mubi, Adamawa State.

    French News Agency AFP reported the death toll, citing a police source.

    “There has been a bomb explosion at a football field this evening and so far more than 40 people have been killed,” an officer in the town said.

    The bomber struck the town of Mubi in the evening, said Emmanuel Akinyele, a church pastor.

    A military source said several bodies had been recovered, adding that the dead and wounded were still being evacuated from the area.

    A military source told Reuters that the number of those dead and injured is not clear at this time. He added that several bodies were recovered, while the wounded are still being evacuated.

    A witness told the news agency that the victims were  watching a televised match.

    No group has claimed responsibility, though Boko Haram has staged attacks in the area in the past. The same group abducted over 200 schoolgirls in Chibok, Borno State, on April 14 and is still holding them captive.

     

  • Kano blast kills two suicide bombers

    Kano blast kills two suicide bombers

    Terrorism swept through Kano yesterday for the second time in five days leaving two suicide bombers dead.

    They were blown up at Eastern bye-pass in Hotoro Quarters by explosives which they were allegedly transporting in a truck to an area of Kano Metropolis.

    According to the State Police Commissioner, Musa Daura, the explosives which targeted the JTF checkpoint were remote controlled and buried in the ground close to the checkpoint.

    Mr Daura said one of the suspects who targeted the police checkpoint disguised as a water seller while the other one gave him cover on a motorcycle. However, on throwing the explosive, it hit the motorcycle rider and killed both of them on the spot.

    The commissioner said no police officer was killed or injured in the attacks, adding that four other people were arrested while attempting to attack the police after the explosion.

    Even before the incident, residents of Hotoro and Sharada quarters had been woken up by multiple explosions.

    It was not immediately clear what led to the explosions.

    However, the police arrested four Nigeriens in connection with the explosions.

    On Friday night, gun men had killed a shop owner, identified as Matthew Owoniyi, who was shot dead inside his chemist in the presence of his wife and two kids .They shot him thrice in the head.

    The gunmen allegedly made away with Owoniyi’s sale proceeds for the day and his Golf car.

    Tension sparked by last Monday’s explosion at the Kano Central Motor park in which about 65 commuters were killed is yet to subside.

    Also on Friday, terrorists struck in Ganye, Adamawa State, close to the Nigeria/ Cameroun border.

    Twenty-five people are feared dead in the terror attack with the divisional police station, prison, a first generation bank and relaxation centres as the prime targets.

    Indeed, most of the casualties were recorded at the relaxation spots.

    The terrorists first struck the police station which they set on fire.

    They then proceeded to the nearby prison, forcing its gates open for the inmates to escape.

    Next was the bank.

    With the aid of dynamite they tore down the walls to enable them gain access into the vaults.

    It could not be immediately confirmed if they succeeded in taking away any money.

    With no one venturing out to confront them, the terrorists had a field day moving from one hotel/relaxation centre to the other.

    They ransacked everywhere and opened fire on fun seekers. Pandemonium soon broke out with people running for their lives.

    The State Police Command confirmed the incident.

    Its spokesman, Mohammed Ibrahim, a superintendent (SP), said a team of policemen and soldiers had been deployed to go after the hoodlums.

    The Comptroller of Prisons in the state, Mr. Andrew Barka, also confirmed the attack on the Ganye Prison. He gave no details.

    Terrorists have lately been raiding border towns around the Nigeria/Cameroun border.

    Only last month, they seized a French family of seven in Northern Cameroun and allegedly moved them into Nigeria.

    They are demanding the release of imprisoned terrorists for them to free the hostages.

  • Why bombers struck in Kano, by SSS

    Why bombers struck in Kano, by SSS

    The State Security Service (SSS) yesterday blamed Monday’s bombing of vehicles at a motor park in Kano on the lowering of guard by Nigerians as a result of the improved security situation in the North.

    SSS spokesperson Ms Marilyn Ogar, on Channels television yesterday said: “Maybe Nigerians became too relaxed because there was a little bit of respite.”

    She claimed that operatives had taken out the leadership of the fundamentalist sect, Boko Haram, and that some loose cannons, who are trying to “find their feet”, are staging these new attacks.

    Emir of Kano Alhaji Ado Bayero said the strike was a calculated attempt to spark a civil war among peace loving ethnic groups in Nigeria.

    Abia State Governor Theodore Orji suggested a return home to the Igbo living in the North to forestall further killings.

    The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) urged the government to tackle the security challenge headlong.

    But President Goodluck Jonathan said the government would no longer tolerate “wanton destructions of lives and property”.

    He expressed regret that “the destruction of valuable and critical infrastructure in recent times had depleted Kano, known for its huge commercial activities.

    Dr. Jonathan’s message was delivered by a Federal Government delegation led by Minister of Interior Abba Moro, which visited the Emir of Kano.

    In the team were Police Affairs Minister Caleb Olubolade, Chief of Army Staff Gen. Azubuike Ihejirika and Inspector General of Police Mohammed Abubakar.

    They also visited Governor Rabiu Kwankwanso .

    Governor Orji urged the Igbo living in the North to return to the East, should their lives continue to be in danger.

    Orji, in a statement by his Special Adviser on Public Communication, Ben Onyechere, said: “In view of incessant massacre unreservedly perpetrated against the Igbo, it has become urgent and needful for Igbo in the North to take a decision that will forestall further killings, one of which is to come home because life is more precious than silver and gold.

    “Nobody can restore one’s life that is lost, no matter the amount of money or property; so, it has become pertinent that since you are targets of unjustifiable attacks, you may have little or no option than to relocate, if necessary.

    “I painfully send my heartfelt condolences to all those who have lost loved ones, just as much as I condole myself because I feel the pain as much as everyone else. A dead man has no enemy.

    “In as much as the Federal Government is taking steps to put a stop to the murderous acts of insecurity, we as citizens and leaders have the onerous task of assisting in every way so that collectively we can find a solution to this precarious and condemnable situation which is certainly alien to this country.

    “At this point, therefore, no one should consider the option of reprisal attacks because, just as the President has said, we are yet to identify the sources of these attacks which is the reason we must give unflinching support to our security agencies who are also incurring loss of lives on daily basis.”

    The president of a foremost Igbo socio-political group, the C21, Senator Annie Okonkwo, described the suicide attack as senseless.

    Okonkwo urged Nigerians to confront the challenge.

    In a statement by his spokesperson, Collins Steve Ugwu, Okonkwo said: “If western education is sin’ as Boko Haram wants to force down our throats, does mass murder of dissenting Nigerians edify their brand of Islamic bigotry?”

    He added that “speculative politics must be put aside to secure the supremacy of our corporate indivisible entity as a nation, because a nation that cannot stem this variant of extremism in peace time is a nation that has surrendered to anarchy without a fight. When routine murderous killings of innocent citizens of our country by Boko Haram is tolerated, the abiding faith of the people is severely weakened and their resolve as one entity fatally eroded.”

    The Emir of Kano said that the sinister motive behind the bombing of a motor park in a predominantly Christian quarters in Kano was a calculated attempt to spark a civil war among peace loving ethnic groups in Nigeria.

    The 19th Fulani emir of Kano told the visiting Federal Government delegation in his palace that there was no other reason behind this ungodly act rather than to create tension and cause chaos in the country.

    The monarch said: “I feel saddened to hear everyday that somebody is being killed here or there, yet we can’t figure out what is happening, and who is behind this. I feel the Federal Government should do more to fish out the perpetrators of these heinous acts to free Nigeria and indeed our state from the festering mess.”

    Alhaji Ado Bayero, who himself was a victim of the insurgent group, stressed that “something is missing in this whole cycle of violence, and feel that government should do more to fish out the real people behind the orgy of violence. Nigerians are living harmoniously both in Kano and, I believe, all over the federation, regardless of tribe and religion but all of a sudden we find ourselves in this. As a matter of fact, government should wake up and confront the challenge.”

    The revered emir added: “In my fair assessment, Nigeria is in a serious situation. The killings everyday of citizenry will certainly not auger well with the nation and that is why I believe strongly that somebody is behind this, which demand that government must fish out whoever is behind it now’.

    The Emir, however, expressed concern over the non implementation of position paper submitted to the Presidency by the Northern Elders some eight months ago despite the assurance to do so.

    The Northern Elders Forum, through Alhaji Yusif Maitama Sule, had earlier complained to the emir over non implementation of a position paper the Forum submitted to the Presidency on effective way to resolve the crisis in the North.

    The elders who had earlier visited emir included Justice Mustahpa Akanbi, Yahya Kwande, Sheik Lemu, Paul Unongo, Airmarshal Lamis Dagash, John Washfam, Sani Zangon Daura, General ABDUrAHAMN Dambazau and many others.

    Moro told Governor Kwankwaso: “We are here as a delegation of the Federal Government at the instance of President Goodluck Jonathan to commiserate with you, government and people of Kano State over the unfortunate bomb blast that shook the foundation of this state and claimed so many lives and property.

    “I am to convey to you the heartfelt condolences of Mr. President and the people of Nigeria over this unfortunate incident and to say that Mr President is saddened by the fact that in spite of spirited and determined efforts by government to contend the security challenges, this conflict continues to rear its ugly head occasionally’.

    The Minister also told Kwankwaso that the President ‘particularly has asked him to request that this singular incident should still be resolved by the Nigerian people to ensure that we mitigate the consequences of this crisis and take steps to stamp them out.

    “He added that cases of wanton destruction of lives and properties, which took years to put in place would no longer be acceptable and called on “all of us, government at all tiers and levels, Nigerians and friends of Nigerians to accept the reality that security is a joint responsibility of everybody and that he would want to seek your support and assistance in ensuring that this violence is addressed.”

    Kwankwaso expressed dismay over the tribal sentiment attached to the incident, saying that from the list of 25 victims at the hospitals, majority were natives.

    Kwankwaso said both Christians and Muslims have been praying for the return of peace and unity in the state.

    He said it is regrettable that Politicians in Abuja have started politicising the issue for cheap political goals, adding that it is a wrong thing to do.

    “We are already collecting names of those who died in the attack and from what we see, they may comprise of mostly natives and people from this part of the country.”

     

  • 25 die in Kano as bombers attack Lagos-bound bus

    25 die in Kano as bombers attack Lagos-bound bus

    Blast barbaric, says Jonathan 

    Obi urges calm

     

    SUICIDE bombers struck yesterday in Kano, killing no fewer than 25 people.

    Some of the dead included passengers aboard a Lagos-bound luxury bus.

    Park workers and traders were also killed at the New Road Motor Park in Sabon Gari, which is predominantly occupied by non-indigenes in the North’s commercial headquarters. Many were injured.

    The attack, which occurred at about 4.30 pm during the peak period, was targeted at the 59-seater luxury bus, which was blown up as it was departing the park.

    Eyewitnesses said three suicide bombers positioned their Golf car, which had been primed with explosives, between Gobison Luxury Bus and one other before detonating the explosives.

    The National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) said last night that the death toll could not be ascertained. NEMA spokesman Yushau Shuaib, in text messages said: “Rescuers and security personnel are yet to determine the source of explosions that occurred this evening at a motor park for long journeys in New Road, Sabo Gari. While casualty figure is not available at the moment, the seriously injured have been taken to the hospital and bodies evacuated.”

    The scene was immediately cordoned off by men of the military Joint Task Force (JTF) to pave the way for the evacuation of the victims, who were taken to the Murtala Muhammed Specialist Hospital.

    Some of the injured had their limbs cut off. About six explosions were heard in the busy park that accommodates mostly Southeast and Southwest-bound passengers.

    Besides the wrecked Gobison bus, 10 others were affected.

    There was stampede in Sabo Gari as residents scampered for safety, following the multiple explosions. Businesses closed abruptly. The Kano Central Market and other places of business were shut.

    JTF spokesman Captain Ikedichi Iweha, said it would be hasty to release a casualty figure, adding that “our interest now is to ensure that the injured are taken to the hospital for treatment while efforts are being made by fire fighters to extinguish the raging flames in the park.

    “We are also making efforts to prevent thieves from taking advantage of the situation to steal.”

    A survivour, who identified himself as Mr. John, told this reporter: “I went to the motorpark with my family who were billed to travel to Lagos. I had purchased the ticket and wanted my family and I to have some refreshment a few metres away from where the Lagos-bound luxury bus was parked.

    “As we started taking the refreshments, we heard a loud explosion, the smoke of which enveloped the area. We survived by the grace of God. My immediate family and I are not hurt, but let me tell you, my brother, many people died.”

    The Chairman of the Kano Chapter of Ohanaeze Ndigbo, Chief Tobias Idika, said from records available to him, many people died and five luxury buses were burnt.

    “This is the worst experience of the lives of the Igbo in Kano. We have lost many souls while five buses were burnt to ashes.”

    The Assistant Inspector-General of Police (AIG) Zone 1, Mr David Omojola, visited the scene of the incident, describing it as tragic and unfortunate. “My men have taken position and doing everything possible to restore confidence in members of the public, as well as to evacuate the dead and injured to the mortuary and the hospital”, Omojola said.

    President Goodluck Jonathan condemned the explosion.

    According to a statement by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Dr. Rueben Abati, the President said the barbaric incident will not deter the Federal Government from its strong-willed determination to overcome those who do not mean well for the nation.

    The Federal Government, he said, would not be stampeded, for any reason whatsoever, into abandoning its unrelenting war against terrorists in the country.

    The statement said: “President Jonathan reassured Nigerians and foreigners in the country that the Nigerian Government will continue to do all that is required to ensure the safety of lives and property, including continued collaboration with local and international partners and stakeholders to check the menace of terrorism.”

    “President Jonathan commiserated with the victims of the Kano explosions, their families and friends, and assured the Kano State government of the Federal Government’s continued support.”

    Anambra State Governor Peter Obi condemned the bombing.

    Obi who said he heard the news as the plane that conveyed him to Rome, where he is in the Federal Government delegation for the installation of Pope Francis I today landed, described it as “barbaric and condemnable”.

    He said that no amount of anger for whatever reasons, rightly or wrongly, would justify what he called atavistic throw- back to old and superseded way of settling disputes by blood letting.”

    Calling for restraint on the part of those affected, he said he was in the process of contacting his Kano counterpart for detail, since, according to him, the barbarism took place at Sabongari, the home to non-indigenes, especially the Igbo.

    Obi prayed for the repose of the souls of the affected and for God to continue to grant wisdom to the President as he works tirelessly for the country to overcome her security challenges.

     

  • Ahead Xmas: Suicide bombers strike again

    Ahead Xmas: Suicide bombers strike again

    It was all despair in Kano yesterday after terrorists attacked the offices of two major mobile phone operators-Airtel and MTN- in the city 72 hours ahead of Christmas.

    Two persons, both of them suspected suicide bombers, were killed in the blasts, a reminder of last year’s Christmas Day terror attack on St Theresa’s Catholic Church, Madallah, Niger State, in which at least 44 worshippers perished.

    As a result of the attacks, security agents have been placed on a fresh alert nation-wide.

    Particular attention is being given to Borno, Yobe, Kano, Plateau, Kaduna and Bauchi States which have been the major battle fields of the Islamist sect, Boko Haram in the outgoing year.

    It was also gathered that all armed forces personnel have been restricted to the barracks.

    The civilians living in all barracks and other military formations are now being subjected to security watch.

    Yesterday’s attacks were the latest in the wave of attacks on telecommunication facilities in the northern part of the country by terrorists.

    According to an eyewitness account, the alleged suicide bomber at about 8 am at Mallam Kato Square, where the Airtel office was located attempted to park his vehicle on the premises in a manner that aroused suspicion..

    Security operatives patrolling the area spotted him at once and shot him before he could smash the car into the building.

    Moments after the suicide bomber was shot and killed, his car exploded, the impact of which damaged the company’s reception hall, as well as three vehicles parked at the premises.

    More security officers were soon drafted to the premises. They cordoned off the area while business outlets in the area quickly shut down for the day.

    News of the incident quickly spread, leading to panic among residents.

    Security patrol was also increased with the aid of armoured personnel carriers. Check points were also set up in strategic parts of the metropolis particularly in Sabon Gari and on Burma Road.

    In the other attack on MTN office close to the Post Office area, the alleged suicide bomber, riding on a motorbike, rammed his motorbike into the MTN fence, which exploded on impact, killing the suicide bomber.

    Capt. Iweha Ikedichi, who speaks for the Joint Task Force (JTF) deployed in Kano to reduce the threat of the Islamic sect, Boko Haram confirmed the incidents.

    The Airtel bomber rammed through the gate, detonating a bomb which injured an Airtel worker, Ikedichi said. The facility is located in a high-security area, less than 100 meters from the regional office of the Central Bank (CBN).

    “The one who hit the Airtel office was shot by military men before the bomb exploded … at the MTN office the car rammed into the fence but no civilians were killed,” Ibrahim Idris, the chief of police in Kano, told Reuters. Both bombs went off.

    A military source said one security guard was injured and has been taken to hospital.

    Some Airtel users said that they could not make calls, suggesting that the attack may have affected the company’s switch station. An Airtel spokesman could not immediately be reached for comment.

    About three kilometers away, the MTN bomber was stopped from entering the company’s premises by security officers who shot him at the gate, causing an explosion there, Ikedichi said.

    The target was MTN’s switch station in Kano, said the company’s spokeswoman Funmilayo Omogbenigun. Switch stations control the regional mobile phone network and if they are seriously damaged, the entire network could go down.

    Authorities suspect the Boko Haram sect for the attacks, said Ikedichi.

    Eyewitnesses said the first suicide bomber dropped his Golf car at the Airtel office in Malam Kato Square, where the bomb explosion killed one security officer of the company and the bomber.

    “The car hits the place at about 8a.m. on Saturday morning, although I don’t know if there were people inside the office but I can confirm to you that one security officer who was standing at the gate when the car came was dead,” a source said.

    Officials of the state fire service were called into action to extinguish the fire from spreading to the neighbouring business areas.

    The second suicide bomber was said to have hit MTN office at Post Road, 30 minutes after the attack on Airtel’s office.

    A staff of MTN in Kano, who witnessed the attack and does not want to be identified said : “it was an unsuccessful attack in our office. They wanted to penetrate the office but they could not and they detonated the bomb from the outside.”

    The National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), after mobilising response agencies to the scene of the early morning explosions in Kano, confirmed the “coordinated attacks by suicide bombers at the facilities of two telecom operators in separate locations in Kano Municipality.”

    A statement signed by NEMA’s Head of Public Relations, Mr Yushau A. Shuaib, explained that “the attacks, which took place this morning, were targeted at Airtel office around Mallam Kato Square old Parade Ground of Unknown Soldiers and MTN facility opposite Floor Mill, Malali Road, Kano.”

    “While securities have further been strengthened in the state, the areas of the attacks have been cordoned off,” the statement added.

    The group is held responsible for more than 770 deaths this year alone, according to figures compiled by The Associated Press.

    Boko Haram’s campaign of bombings and shootings has targeted mosques, churches, schools, universities and government buildings. In September, the group broadened its scope by attacking mobile phone towers for the first time.

    In September, a series of attacks damaged more than 31 towers operated by all the major mobile phone providers in the country. Other attacks have occurred since then, further straining the one link the country relies on for communication.

    No one has yet claimed responsibility for the attacks although the Islamist sect had threatened mobile phone companies earlier in the year, warning that they would be targeted for cooperating with the government to flush out its members.

    Investigation by our correspondent revealed that the presidency has directed the armed forces, security agencies and the police to ensure a peaceful Christmas by putting suicide bombers at bay.

    “All military formations, security agencies and the police have been directed to be on the alert to ensure a safe and blissful Christmas for all. The latest attacks on telecommunications facilities revealed a pattern by these suicide bombers in the past,” a source said yesterday.

    “They (terrorists) like striking after demobilising the communication facilities in their targeted areas.

    “But the military and security agencies are a step ahead of these bombers. No military, police or security post will be left unmanned no matter how small it is.”

    The source added: “All civilians living in the barracks or military formations are under watch or strict surveillance.

    “In fact, we are getting to a stage whereby only wives, children and limited number of relations of military personnel will be allowed to live in these barracks and they will be duly accredited.

    “Already, movement into and out of barracks or military formations has been restricted or well- defined.

    “Except on serious medical grounds, officers and men will not enjoy pass during the Christmas period. They are to remain on duty as part of the security alert nationwide.”

    Even before the attacks , security had been increased in all the major northern cities, although security experts say given the scale of Christian worship in Nigeria they cannot protect everyone.

    Kano was the scene of Boko Haram’s deadliest attack which killed at least 186 people in January in coordinated bombings and shootings.

    Armed police have been guarding major churches in Kano in the last one week and additional police checkpoints have been set up around the majority-Muslim city.

    Police in Kano said during the week that their anti-terrorism squads have been searching houses and buildings they suspect to be hideouts of criminals and “terrorists”.

    Security experts say they believe Boko Haram is seeking to spark a religious conflict.

    A French national was kidnapped in Katsina State last week by people France’s intelligence agency said were “an organised group linked to a terrorist activity”.

  • Suicide bombers kill 15 in Somali capital

    Suicide bombers kill 15 in Somali capital

    Two suicide bombers walked into a restaurant in central Mogadishu and killed at least 15 people on Thursday, police said, highlighting the security challenges facing the country’s new president.

    There was no immediate claim of responsibility. However, suspicions will fall on the Islamist militant group al Shabaab which has carried out a campaign of suicide bombings since it withdrew from the capital last year under military pressure.

    The al Qaeda-linked group claimed responsibility for suicide bombings last week outside a hotel where President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud was holding a news conference just two days into the job, an attack interpreted as a warning from the insurgents that they are far from defeated.

    Police spokesman General Abdullahi Barise told Reuters 15 people were killed in Thursday’s attack. A Reuters photographer saw several bodies, the severed heads of the two bombers and pools of blood on the floor.

    The blasts targeted The Village restaurant, owned by well-known Somali businessman Ahmed Jama, who had returned to his home country from London to set up business against the advice of friends.

    “My relatives, whom I created jobs for, have perished. My customers have perished. All innocent people. I cannot count them, their dead bodies are before me,” a distraught Jama told Reuters.

    Three local journalists were among the dead, including a reporter at the state-run Somali National Television, the National Union of Somali Journalists said.

    The al Shabaab-linked website www.somalimemo.net said in a statement that those killed “supported the infidel government” but stopped short of saying the group was behind the attack.