Maiduguri, Nigeria
-
A truck exploded
in a huge fireball killing at least 15 people on Tuesday in the north-east
Nigerian city of Maiduguri, the latest attack in a city repeatedly hit by Boko
Haram Islamists.
The bomb rocked
Maiduguri's largest roundabout near the crowded on Monday Market where
elderly
women line the road selling peanuts and kola nuts as snacks to morning
commuters.
The defence
ministry said in a tweet that an "improvised explosive device" went
off in "a van loaded with charcoal" and that the area had been
cordoned off.
Unruly crowds
tried to attack firefighters deployed to the scene, accusing of them of
arriving too slowly and hindering their efforts to put out the raging blaze, an
AFP photographer said.
An AFP reporter
said elderly women and poor children who beg at the roundabout were among the
casualties.
Victims were taken
to the State Specialist Hospital, where the photographer saw the bodies of 15
people killed in the blast, while witnesses said the toll could be much higher.
While there was no
immediate claim of responsibility, blame was likely to fall on Boko Haram,
which was founded in Maiduguri more than a decade ago and has killed thousands
during a five-year uprising.
Attacks in the
city were once a daily occurence but a huge military offensive launched last
year and backed by vigilante fighters had some success in flushing the
insurgents out of the city into the remote corners of Borno state, of which
Maiduguri is the capital.
But those gains
appear to have been lost following a series of attacks in the city this year
targeting civilians and the security services.
A bomb ripped
through a crowded market in January. In March, hundreds of Islamists stormed
the military's Giwa Barracks in Maiduguri, a notorious army prison, and set
free scores of their brothers in arms.
The insurgents'
kidnap of more than 200 schoolgirls in April from the remote town of Chibok in
Borno state provoked international outrage and drew unprecedented global
attention to the Islamist uprising.
Tuesday's attack
came less than 24 hours after Nigeria's military said it had broken up a Boko
Haram intelligence cell and arrested its leader, alleged to have taken part in
the abduction of the schoolgirls.
A defence
headquarters statement said that troops had found the cell headed by a
businessman "who participated actively in the abduction".
Of the 276 girls
seized, 57 have escaped while 219 are still missing.
The businessman,
identified as Babuji Ya'ari, who was also a member of a civilian youth group
that worked along with the military, popularly known as Civilian JTF (Joint
Task Force), allegedly used his position as a cover to work for the militants,
it said.
There was no
independent confirmation of the claim.
Boko Haram
Islamists are blamed for killing thousands since 2009, but the first half of
this year has been the bloodiest stretch of the insurgency, with more than 2
000 people killed.
An attack on
churches on Sunday near Chibok blamed on Boko Haram gunmen killed 54 people, an
official has said.
They hurled
explosives into churches, torched buildings and fired on worshippers as they
tried to flee, residents said. - Sapa-AFP
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