Maiduguri, Nigeria
- A bomb in a van carrying charcoal exploded in a busy market in north-east
Nigeria on Tuesday, killing at least 20 people in the latest suspected attack
by Islamist militants, witnesses said.
No one immediately
claimed responsibility for the blast. But in recent months, the Islamist group
Boko Haram has embarrassed President Goodluck Jonathan's government with a
spate of bombings and spectacular raids, mostly in northeast Nigeria, including
the mid-April abduction of more than 200 schoolgirls.
The military said
earlier on Tuesday that it had arrested a number of suspected Boko Haram
collaborators including a Maiduguri businessman it said was involved in the
abduction of the schoolgirls.
Boko Haram has
also struck at Abuja, the capital of Africa's biggest economy, with three
bombings in three months.
Nigeria's defence
headquarters said in a statement on its Twitter account that “a van loaded with
charcoal and IED exploded” in Maiduguri's Monday Market on Tuesday. IED means
an improvised explosive device.
Musa Sumail, a
local human rights activist in Maiduguri who reports on the violence there,
told Reuters he counted 20 bodies at the scene of the market explosion.
“Many people died,
mostly drivers of taxis that were packed near the roundabout,” a witness,
trader Modu Ba'ana, said.
A separate
explosion at a busy intersection in the north Nigerian city of Kaduna on
Tuesday evening around 8.30pm (19h30 GMT) wounded two people but caused no
deaths, police said.
The city lies
along Nigeria's “Middle Belt”, where its largely Christian south and Muslim
north meet, and it has been targeted by Boko Haram in the past.
Nigeria's military
said in a statement that the businessman it had arrested had helped the
Islamist militant group plan several attacks, including the killing of a
traditional ruler, the Emir of Gwoza.
Two women were
also arrested, one of whom was accused of coordinating payments to other
“operatives”.
A year-old
military offensive against Boko Haram has so far failed to crush the rebels,
despite recent assistance in training, intelligence and surveillance from the
United States and other Western allies of Jonathan's government.
Boko Haram says it
wants to establish an Islamist state in Africa's top oil producer, and the
insurgency has killed thousands since 2009, destabilising much of the
north-east.
The April
abduction of 276 school girls from Chibok in Borno State - 219 of whom remain
in captivity - has become a symbol of the government's powerlessness to protect
civilians.
Defence spokesman
Major-General Chris Olukolade said in the statement the arrested man used his
membership of a pro-government vigilante group “as a cover, while remaining an
active terrorist”.
“His main role in
the group is to spy and gather information for the terrorists,” he added.
Olukolade said the
man had coordinated several deadly attacks in Maiduguri since 2011, including
on customs and military locations as well as planting improvised bombs.
Violence has been
relentless in north-east Nigeria in particular, with hundreds killed in the
past two months, but its economic impact has been limited because most of the
unrest is in Nigeria's poorest, least productive region.
Finance Minister
Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala said on Tuesday that Boko Haram would knock half a
percentage point off the country's economic growth like last year, but
investors had not been put off.
On Sunday, the
Chibok community was attacked again in three places. Militants opened fire on
churches and homes, killing dozens and burning houses to the ground.
The militants are
extending their reach beyond their remote northeastern heartlands. A bomb in an
upmarket shopping district of the capital Abuja killed 21 people last week, the
third attack on the capital in three months.
Boko Haram's
reliance on local sources of financing, such as ransoms from kidnapping,
robberies and looting, and their use of human couriers to move cash has made
the group's sources of funding difficult to track and choke off.
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