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Sunday, 18 October 2015
Female suicide bombers kill 11- police
Two female suicide bombers killed at least 11 people in
northeast Nigeria after hiding among residents fleeing a
suspected Boko Haram attack on a remote village, police
and a local official said on Sunday.
The attack happened in Dar village, in the north of
Adamawa state, on Saturday evening, the former head of
the Madagali local government council, Maina Ularamu,
said.
Boko Haram has repeatedly attacked the area, which is
near the border with Borno state to the north and the
Islamists’ Sambisa Forest stronghold, prompting calls for
better security.
“Residents fled to the bush. After a while, two women who
disguised as fleeing locals blew themselves up… while the
gunmen shot at survivors,” he told reporters.
Ularamu said “so far 12 corpses have been found” but the
Adamawa state police spokesman, Othman Abubakar,
confirmed 11 dead.
On October 1, seven people were killed in the village of
Kirchinga, near Madagali, while four people were killed on
September 30 in two other villages close by, both in
similar raids.
On September 11, seven people were killed when a bomb
went off at a camp for people displaced by the conflict
outside the state capital, Yola — the first time Boko
Haram has attacked refugees.
Thirty-one people were killed when two male suicide
bombers detonated their explosives at a market in Yola
on June 4.
Suicide bombings are fast becoming Boko Haram’s
preferred method of inflicting mass civilian casualties,
accounting for seven of the eight recorded Boko Haram
attacks this month in Nigeria.
Increasingly, the group is using two or more bombers,
detonating the second or third explosives after peoplerush
to help those caught up in the first blast.
Similar tactics have been seen in Boko Haram attacks in
Chad, Cameroon and Niger.
This month alone 101 people have been killed in Nigeria,
according to an AFP tally, while nearly 1,370 have died since
President Muhammadu Buhari came to power on May 29.
On Sunday, soldiers shot dead a suspected suicide
bomber outside the main military base in the Borno state
capital, Maiduguri, detonating explosives concealed in her
handbag, a civilian vigilante and a military source told AFP.
At least 34 people were killed in a wave of attacks on
Thursday night and Friday morning on the outskirts of
Maiduguri, while last month 117 died in explosions in the
Ajilari Cross area of the Borno state capital.
The military source, who requested anonymity as he is not
authorised to talk to the media, said the use of human
bombs was a sign of the group’s desperation and frustration
at a fight-back by troops.
“They are looking for every opportunity to hit back, which is
why they have resorted to soft-target attacks on mosques
and markets and such attacks on a military base is intended
to show the terrorists are still strong,” the officer added.
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