Kano Bomb Blast - Witnesses described hearing multiple blasts and seeing
wounded victims in bloodied clothes flee the area as authorities
cordoned off the scene.
“I was boarding the bus to Lagos when I heard a huge explosion,”
Abdulaziz Baban-Lamma, a 47-year-old trader, told AFP from his hospital
bed.
The blast left him with severe injuries to his abdomen and other
survivors ran to assist him when they saw his condition, he said. He
later underwent emergency surgery.
“May Allah curse whoever was behind the act,” he said.
Magawata Goje, 45, was selling dried meat at the station when the bomb went off.
“Something sharp hit me under my right ear,” he said.
“Blood gushed out and I was drenched in my blood.”
When he regained consciousness, “I could see many people burnt to death,” he said.
Emmanuel Bassey, a 37-year-old bus company employee with burns across
his body, said the bombers slammed into one of the buses at high speed.
President Goodluck Jonathan condemned the attack and said his government
would continue “its unrelenting war against terrorists.”
But the government has so far shown little ability to halt violence
linked to an insurgency by the Islamist extremist group Boko Haram.
The bus station targeted on Monday primarily services passengers heading to the mostly Christian south of Nigeria.
It was also attacked in January last year in a blast that wounded several people.
Authorities have not said who was behind the bombing and there has been
no claim of responsibility, but it was similar to previous attacks by
Boko Haram.
Kano has been repeatedly targeted by the group, blamed for killing hundreds in the region since 2009.
Its deadliest assault yet occurred in the northern city in January 2012,
when at least 185 people were killed in coordinated bomb and gun
attacks.
Nigeria, Africa’s most populous nation and largest oil producer, is
roughly divided between a mainly Muslim north and predominantly
Christian south.
The country’s main Christian association CAN — currently led by
evangelicals — issued a statement on Tuesday saying recent attacks “were
a signpost of the intended extermination of Christians and Christianity
from northern Nigeria.”
Prominent Catholic leaders have however been much more measured in their
reactions to the violence, saying the extremists seem intent on
provoking a religious crisis. They have urged Christians and Muslims to
work together for peace.
Boko Haram’s targets have included symbols of government authority,
churches and Muslims it views as collaborating with the government.
A suicide bombing of UN headquarters in the capital Abuja in 2011 killed at least 25 people.
The group has claimed to be fighting for the creation of an Islamic state, though its demands have repeatedly shifted.
It is believed to include various factions with differing aims. One
splinter faction, Ansaru, appears to have focused on kidnapping
foreigners.
Boko Haram itself had not claimed any kidnappings until recently, when
it said it was behind the abduction of a French family of seven over the
border in Cameroon.
Many analysts have said poverty and neglect of northern Nigeria, which
remains underdeveloped when compared to the oil-rich south, have helped
feed the insurgency.
Despite the country’s oil reserves, most of Nigeria’s population lives on less than $2 per day, with corruption deeply rooted.
The military’s violent response to the insurgency has also worsened the
situation, according to rights groups and activists in the region.
Violence linked to the insurgency in northern and central Nigeria,
including killings by security forces, have left some 3,000 people dead
since 2009.
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