Two suicide bombings rocked Nigeria’s northeast city of Maiduguri on
Saturday, killing at least nine people and injuring scores of others,
emergency services said.
One explosion happened outside a gas
station, while the other was near the Bakassi camp for internally
displaced persons (IDP), underscoring the continued threat from Boko
Haram jihadists who are suspected of being behind the attacks.
“Two
suicide bombers riding in motorised rickshaws this morning detonated
their explosives 10 minutes apart, with one of them targeting the
Bakassi IDP camp on the outskirts of the city,” Mohammed Kanar,
spokesman for Nigeria Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), said.
“One
of the bombers tried to enter the Bakassi IDP camp but the explosives
detonated at the gates, killing four people,” Kanar said.
“The
explosives on the other one detonated minutes later as he rode with two
other people towards the (Bakassi) IDP camp near the fuel depot.”
Following the blast, one of the yellow rickshaws burst apart in half, while the ground was littered with metal shards.
“Nine
persons lost their lives with twenty-four persons injured and evacuated
to various hospitals,” NEMA said in a statement posted on Twitter.
Boko Haram has devastated northeast Nigeria in its quest to create an
Islamist state, killing over 20,000 people and displacing 2.6 million
from their homes.
Since taking up arms against the Nigerian government in 2009, Boko Haram has disrupted trade routes and farms.
Now
nearly 50,000 children are facing death by starvation if they don’t get
food and almost 250,000 more are severely malnourished in Borno state,
according to UNICEF.
“Nigeria is facing the worst humanitarian
crisis on the African continent,” Peter Lundberg, acting United Nations
Deputy Humanitarian Coordinator, warned last week.
Nigerian
President Muhammadu Buhari has led a successful offensive against the
insurgents since coming into office last year, but Boko Haram is still
capable of carrying out deadly attacks.
In October, Boko Haram
attacked a town near Chibok, where in 2014 it kidnapped over 200
schoolgirls, drawing global attention to the insurgency.
Later
this month, the jihadists claimed that they killed 20 soldiers in
“fierce clashes” in the Ghashghar area of northeastern Nigeria.
The
violence is spilling into neighbouring Niger, Chad and Cameroon, with
Niger early in October declaring two days of national mourning after 22
soldiers were killed in an attack blamed on the jihadists against a camp
sheltering almost 4,000 refugees.
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