Scores of people have been killed in Zabarmari village, 10 kilometres
from Maiduguri, capital of Borno state, north east Nigeria after at
least six female suicide bombers loyal to the Boko Haram terror group
blew themselves in the middle of a huge crowd.
The latest carnage
in series of attacks that have claimed more than 200 lives in just three
days happened Friday. According to an AFP tally, no fewer than 650
people have been killed since President Muhammadu Buhari took over in
May.
Local resident Haladu Musa, who fled the attack, told how
‘large numbers’ of fighters poured into the village, overpowering
government forces deployed to prevent the insurgents reaching Maiduguri.
Then,
as people began to flee, a number of female suicide bombers started
blowing themselves up in their midst, killing large numbers of people,
he said.
‘Most of the casualties came from the suicide bombings,’
he said, without being able to give a precise figure for the dead and
injured, Mr Musa said.
‘A total of six suicide bombers detonated
themselves… killing scores of people while some people were also
wounded. A soldier also died,’ the Nigerian army said in a statement
without specifying the sex of the bombers.
The army said a jeep
full of improvised explosive devices was recovered by troops, adding
there was an ongoing search ‘for any bombs that might have been hidden
or left unexploded in the area.’
Musa said the militants looted
shops and torched ‘almost half the village’ before eventually being
repelled after the military sent in reinforcements.
Danlami
Ajaokuta, a civilian vigilante helping the military battle Boko Haram,
who also witnessed the attack, spoke of heavy casualties.
‘The
main concern now is to evacuate and attend to the injured and later
recover the dead bodies now lying in the village,’ he said, adding that
more than 100 injured had been taken to hospital.
Boko Haram,
which is fighting to establish a hardline Islamic state in northeast
Nigeria and has sworn allegiance to the Islamic State group, has
intensified its campaign of violence since President Muhammadu Buhari
came to power on May 29.
The Zabarmari attack followed a string of
attacks across restive Borno state since Wednesday that have been
blamed on the jihadists.
Earlier this week, militants gunned down
worshippers at evening Ramadan prayers, shot women in their homes and
dragged men and boys from their beds to kill them in the dead of night.
A young female suicide bomber also killed 12 worshippers when she blew herself up in a mosque.
Buhari
condemned the attacks as ‘inhuman and barbaric’ and again vowed to end
the Islamists’ six-year-old insurgency which has killed at least 15,000
people and displaced 1.5 million others.
Buhari’s spokesman Femi
Adesina said Saturday the president would keep his pledge to defeat the
Islamists but added that the government did not rule out talks with the
insurgents.
‘If Boko Haram opts for negotiation, the government will not be averse to it,’ Adesina said a statement.
‘Government will, however, not be negotiating from a position of weakness, but that of strength,’ he said.
‘President Muhammadu Buhari is resolute. He has battled and won insurgency before, he is poised to win again,’ he added.
The
spike in violence has sparked concern that earlier gains by the armies
of Nigeria, Niger, Chad and Cameroon against the militants were being
eroded.
The four countries – all of which border Lake Chad, a
focal point of Boko Haram unrest – took the fight to the militants early
this year to try claw back some of the territory they had gained in the
northeast.
The armies managed to push the militants out of
several towns and villages, but the recent attacks show the group to be
far from defeated.
A new regional force comprising 8,700 troops
from Nigeria, Niger, Chad, Cameroon and Benin is due to deploy at the
end of the month.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
NEW HOME, CAR OWNERS EMERGE AS COWLSO ENDS THREE DAY WOMEN'S CONFERENCE.
As the 23rd edition of the National Women's Conference organized by the Committee of Wives of Lagos State Officials (COWLSO), ends today...
-
Participants at the maiden edition of the Fuji Roundtable , powered by Goldberg Lager Beer, from the stable of Nigerian Breweries Plc, hav...
-
Against the background of its commitment to increasing basic knowledge that will correct wrong perceptions about beer, Nigerian Breweries P...
-
Nigeria’s state-run oil firm said the West African nation is on the brink of unearthing major oil reserves in the Lake Chad area, after man...
No comments:
Post a Comment