Tag: Death toll

  • Bomb death toll hits 90

    Bomb death toll hits 90

    Military arrests Boko Haram explosions ‘mastermind’, 30 others

    SECURITY agents are holding an elderly man who was found last night allegedly with eight guns hidden in his pick up van in Maiduguri, the troubled Borno State capital.

    No fewer than 90 – up from 35 reported yesterday – people died at the weekend in Boko Haram attacks in the city.

    The identity of the suspect was not immediately known.

    Rescuers are still searching for more bodies under the rubble at the scene of explosions.

    The suspect was arrested at the military check point on Lagos Road by soldiers who used anti-weapons scanners to detect the arms.

    Eye witnesses said the arrests caused pandemonium as people rushed towards University Road, thinking another bomb had exploded.

    Youth volunteers, popularly known as Civilian JTF, were combing the scene of the blasts. They were seen on major roads, such as Lagos, Customs, Damboa, Kashim Ibrahim, Bank Road, Post Office, GRA and Polo Extension – all in the Maiduguri metropolis – searching vehicles to fish out suspected insurgents who are believed to have infiltrated the town.

    Mr Innocent Andrew, who is the chairman of the Association of Nurses and Midwives at the University of Maiduguri, said the hospital was besieged by many residents searching for their loved ones among the dead or injured.

    The death toll in weekend’s twin explosions in Maiduguri, has increased to 51.

    A Red Cross official said 51 bodies had been recovered there and many more victims of the Boko Haram attack were believed buried in the rubble.

    Fifty bodies were retrieved, said Hassan Ali, leader of an anti-terror vigilante group.

    It also emerged that while the car bomb was going off in the state capital, insurgents were on the offensive in Mainok, a village 60 kilometres away. They killed no fewer than 39 people.

    Dozens of attackers dressed in military uniforms fired rocket propelled grenades and Kalashnikovs as people prepared for prayers.

    Resident Yahaya Umar said yesterday: “They came in around 7pm and opened fire indiscriminately with RPGs, explosives and AK-47 rifles.

    “They killed 39 people who were buried this morning and destroyed the whole town.”

    Another resident, Abdullahi Gana, gave a similar account of the incident.

    “We were just lamenting the twin blasts in Maiduguri … when the Boko Haram gunmen arrived and started firing volleys of RPGs and guns,” he said

    Corroborating the account, taxi driver Mansu Buba said he returned to Mainok village yesterday to find victims being buried. Mainok has been attacked many times in the past year.

    A State Security Service agent said no huts were left standing. All the thatched-roof huts were gone, he said, speaking on condition of anonymity because he is not authorised to speak to reporters.

    Additional information yesterday on the Maiduguri blast indicated that some buildings collapsed. Others were set aflame with smoke billowing for hours. A resident who worked at the scene through the night but insisted on anonymity, said the victims include children dancing at a wedding celebration and people watching a soccer match at an outdoor cinema. The Associated Press (AP) reported.

    The first blast came from a pickup truck carrying firewood and did not cause many casualties, said Ali. Most of those killed had run to the scene to help when a second explosion blasted from a passenger car, he said.

    Survivors said they captured a man who jumped out of the car, grabbed a tricycle taxi and tried to make off. He was badly beaten and taken to nearby Umaru Shehu General Hospital, where a security guard said all the wounded brought in had died. Most survivors insisted on anonymity for fear of reprisals.

    Some bodies were blown apart, said market trader Mallam Sumaila. An AP reporter saw a body burnt beyond recognition at a hospital where wailing families were collecting bodies for immediate burial in the Muslim tradition.

    The attackers chose a densely populated area with narrow alleyways that maximized the blasts and a Saturday night when the market was open late.

    It was not known how many wounded are being treated in three hospitals in the city.

    More than 300 people were killed in extremist attacks last month in Borno, Adamawa and Yobe states, among them pupils of the Federal Government College, Buni Yadi.

    Outnumbered soldiers are accused of abandoning checkpoints and leaving civilians at the mercy of extremists in two attacks last week that killed about 100 people, including one on a high school.

    Maiduguri has suffered only two attacks in the past six months: a January 14 bomb that killed about 40 people and a bold assault December 5 on the Air Force base and an army barracks on the outskirts in which all five aircraft on the runway were destroyed.

    There are fears that the Boko Haram conflicts could spread. Boko Haram militants already operate in Cameroon, Chad and Niger Republic and lately there have been reports the extremists are threatening to get involved in Central African Republic, where French and African troops are trying to end fighting between Muslim and Christian militias.

    North’s governors yesterday urged people in distress not to despair, predicting an end to the killings soonest.

    Northern States Governors Forum (NSGF), through its Chairman Niger State Governor Babangida Aliyu, urged all stakeholders to continue to pray to God to end the scourge of what they described as “senseless killing of defenceless citizens”.

    The statement by Aliyu, signed by his spokesman Danladi Ndayebo, said: “The Northern States Governors Forum (NSGF) condemns the murderous terrorist attack which killed several persons at the heavily populated Ngomari-Bulumkutu area of Maiduguri, Borno State.

    “The forum deeply regrets this utterly heinous descent to new depths of terror by the perpetrators at a time when security agencies are doing their best to put an end to the scourge of senseless killing of defenceless citizens”.

    The forum urged members of the dreaded Boko Haram to embrace dialogue, because “the surest way to resolve grievances is through dialogue and not violence”.

  • Death toll hits 80 and keeps rising

    Death toll hits 80 and keeps rising

    The death toll from Sandy keeps rising as swathes of the US East Coast battle to recover, three days after being battered by the massive storm.

    More than 80 people are now known to have died in the US, 37 in New York City alone, and others remain missing.

    About 4.5 million customers in 12 states are still without power, and chronic fuel shortages persist.

    The National Guard is to deliver a million meals and bottled water to New Yorkers affected by the storm.

    The number of dead in the US has exceeded the toll from the Caribbean, where 69 people were killed by Sandy.

    The storm could cost the US $50billion (£31billion), according to forecasting firm Eqecat, doubling the previous estimate.

    Climate change fears

    In New York, limited subway services returned yesterday, though four of the seven train tunnels under the East river remained flooded.

    It is day four of the superstorm crisis and the city is shuddering back to life – but slowly. Transport is one of the main problems. Part of the subway system that is the lifeline of the city has reopened but no trains are running in the business hub of Lower Manhattan, where the electricity is still out, or under the East River to the outer boroughs, because the tunnels are still flooded.

    It is taking longer to pump out the water because of the power outage, which is also one of the reasons petrol stations are closing: officials say 50per cent have shut in New York City, 80per cent in New Jersey. So on top of everything else, there is a looming fuel crisis. The power failure has virtually shuttered Lower Manhattan and produced a host of survival stories from residents who have not found shelter elsewhere.

    Fares on commuter trains, subways and buses have been temporarily waived in a bid to entice commuters off the traffic-choked roads.

    Many of the petrol stations in the city and the state of New Jersey remained closed, and fights broke out amid long queues on forecourts.

    The city authorities are only permitting vehicles with three passengers or more to cross into Manhattan.

    Amtrak plans to restart its East Coast service – the busiest train line in the US – on Friday.

    In lower Manhattan, where Sandy brought a record 14ft (4.2m) tidal surge, subway services are still closed and hundreds of thousands of homes without power.

    New York Governor Andrew Cuomo yesterday ordered the National Guard to help deliver some 30 tractor trailers of supplies to one million residents.

    He has told relief workers to prioritise the elderly and poor, especially those living in high-rise blocks.

    Meanwhile, New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg announced his endorsement for President Barack Obama yesterday, saying he had shown leadership on climate change, which he said could be causing severe storms such as Sandy.

    Mayor Bloomberg said the devastation wrought by the cyclone had “brought the stakes of Tuesday’s presidential election into sharp relief”.

    The death toll rose overnight as the extent of destruction became clearer in the south-western New York City borough of Staten Island, where at least 15 bodies have been recovered.

    The storm, one of the biggest to hit the US in decades, swamped the low-lying district with tidal surges, lifting whole houses off their foundations.

    Many residents in that community ignored official evacuation warnings and stayed behind to guard their homes.

    Air-mattress protest

    Two boys, aged two and four, are missing after they were torn from their mother’s arms by floodwaters, as they emerged from their vehicle.

    Police searching the area found a body yesterday morning, the New York Post reports.

    An 89-year-old woman died after spending 12 hours in her deluged Staten Island home, reports the New York Daily News.

    Many residents on Long Island have had their homes destroyed

    Her 65-year-old daughter was unable to save her. Helpless neighbours heard their screams for help but could not reach them.

    Also on Staten Island, John Filipowicz, 51, and his 20-year-old son John were found dead under debris in the basement of their home.

    Breezy Point, in New York City, where fire razed 111 homes, was described by one onlooker as resembling a war zone.

    Emergency crews are working to reach the most badly hit areas.

    In Hoboken, New Jersey, across the Hudson River from New York City, some 20,000 people were still trapped in their homes amid sewage-tainted floodwaters.

    The National Guard is helping with evacuations and meal distributions.

    One frustrated householder reportedly inflated an air mattress and floated to Hoboken city hall to find out why supplies had not yet arrived.

    Jersey City has issued an overnight curfew as well as a driving ban.

    On Wednesday, Mr Obama took an aerial tour to inspect the damage to New Jersey’s shattered Atlantic coastline.

    He put campaigning for next week’s US election on hold for three days to manage the disaster response.

    The cyclone also caused havoc further inland.

    The state of West Virginia has seen up to 5ft of snow in some areas, after Sandy collided with two winter weather fronts.