Two bombings in a key Nigerian city
targeting a prominent cleric and a former head-of-state killed at
least 42 people on Wednesday, in the latest violence blamed on
Boko Haram Islamists.
Officials ordered everyone off the streets and imposed an around-
the-clock curfew to restore order in the targeted city of Kaduna, as
rescue workers raced to care for the dozens of wounded.
Police said the first attack was carried out by a suicide bomber on
the convoy of Sheikh Dahiru Bauchi, a cleric who has fiercely
criticised Boko Haram's deadly five-year uprising.
The blast which went off at about 12:30 pm (1130 GMT) killed at
least 25 people, but Bauchi escaped unhurt, Kaduna state police
chief Umar Shehu said.
The second attack some two hours later that killed 17 people
targeted Muhammadu Buhari, one of Nigeria's most prominent
opposition leaders who also ruled the country as a military
dictator from 1983 to 1985.
Buhari, who was not injured, has also been threatened by Boko
Haram, which accuses him of betraying Islam by accepting
democratic rule.
While there was no immediate claim of responsibility, the
circumstances pointed directly to the Islamic extremists whose
uprising has increasingly threatened the stability of Africa's most
populous country and top oil producer.
Kaduna state Governor Mukhtar Ramalan Yero placed his capital
under a "24-hour curfew... aimed at forestalling (the) breakdown
of law and order," following the attacks, his spokesman Ahmed
Maiyaki told AFP.
- Two prominent targets -
Maiyaki added that the governor was worried about an outbreak of
chaos in a city that has known sectarian clashes in recent years,
because the two targets, Bauchi and Buhari, "hold eminent
positions in the eyes of the people."
Bauchi was travelling in an open-roofed truck in Kaduna's Isa
Kaita area when the bomb off. Well-wishers had gathered on the
roadside to greet him, according to witness Mustapha Sani.
Sani said the blast splattered the blood and flesh of the bomber
and his victims on the cleric's convoy.
Boko Haram has sought to brand Nigeria's senior Islamic leaders
as traitors for submitting to the authority of a secular government,
currently led by a devout Christian, President Goodluck Jonathan.
Buhari, a leader of the opposition All Progressives Congress
(APC), lives in Kaduna but was travelling out of the city through
the Kawo area when his car was attacked.
Musa Illala of the National Emergency Management Agency
described the area as a commuter hub packed with people trying to
catch a bus to their home village ahead of Eid festivals marking
the end of Ramadan.
At least 17 people died in the second blast, he said.
A source close to Buhari who requested anonymity said he
narrowly escaped death when the attacker driving a car packed
with explosives was forced to divert at the last minute, but those
details could not be verified by police.
Buhari came runner-up to Jonathan in Nigeria's 2011 election and
is among the favourites to emerge as the APC's presidential
candidate in polls set for next year.
- Sectarian clashes -
Kaduna, a religiously divided city which was once the political
capital of the north, has seen relatively little Boko Haram violence
in the last 12 months.
Suicide blasts targeting churches in 2012, blamed on the militant
group, sparked sectarian clashes that left hundreds dead.
Human Rights Watch in a report this year warned that religious
tensions remain high and the governor's spokesman said the total
ban on movements was needed to ensure that "mischief makers"
did not use the unrest as a pretext to "cause chaos."
But whether or not the violence spurs a deadly aftermath, the twin
bombings underscore the worsening security situation across
northern Nigeria.
Islamist gunmen have in recent months attacked civilians at will
across the remote northeast, the group's historic stronghold, but
2014 has also seen major unrest in key urban centres.
The capital Abuja has been hit by three separate bombings, while a
double car bombing in the key central city of Jos killed at least
118 people in May.
Jonathan, facing unprecedented pressure to contain the
bloodshed, has asked parliament to approve a $1 billion foreign
loan to upgrade the security services.
Some analysts have described the request as a tacit
acknowledgement by the president that his military is overmatched
by Boko Haram who are blamed for killing more than 10,000
people since 2009.
targeting a prominent cleric and a former head-of-state killed at
least 42 people on Wednesday, in the latest violence blamed on
Boko Haram Islamists.
Officials ordered everyone off the streets and imposed an around-
the-clock curfew to restore order in the targeted city of Kaduna, as
rescue workers raced to care for the dozens of wounded.
Police said the first attack was carried out by a suicide bomber on
the convoy of Sheikh Dahiru Bauchi, a cleric who has fiercely
criticised Boko Haram's deadly five-year uprising.
The blast which went off at about 12:30 pm (1130 GMT) killed at
least 25 people, but Bauchi escaped unhurt, Kaduna state police
chief Umar Shehu said.
The second attack some two hours later that killed 17 people
targeted Muhammadu Buhari, one of Nigeria's most prominent
opposition leaders who also ruled the country as a military
dictator from 1983 to 1985.
Buhari, who was not injured, has also been threatened by Boko
Haram, which accuses him of betraying Islam by accepting
democratic rule.
While there was no immediate claim of responsibility, the
circumstances pointed directly to the Islamic extremists whose
uprising has increasingly threatened the stability of Africa's most
populous country and top oil producer.
Kaduna state Governor Mukhtar Ramalan Yero placed his capital
under a "24-hour curfew... aimed at forestalling (the) breakdown
of law and order," following the attacks, his spokesman Ahmed
Maiyaki told AFP.
- Two prominent targets -
Maiyaki added that the governor was worried about an outbreak of
chaos in a city that has known sectarian clashes in recent years,
because the two targets, Bauchi and Buhari, "hold eminent
positions in the eyes of the people."
Bauchi was travelling in an open-roofed truck in Kaduna's Isa
Kaita area when the bomb off. Well-wishers had gathered on the
roadside to greet him, according to witness Mustapha Sani.
Sani said the blast splattered the blood and flesh of the bomber
and his victims on the cleric's convoy.
Boko Haram has sought to brand Nigeria's senior Islamic leaders
as traitors for submitting to the authority of a secular government,
currently led by a devout Christian, President Goodluck Jonathan.
Buhari, a leader of the opposition All Progressives Congress
(APC), lives in Kaduna but was travelling out of the city through
the Kawo area when his car was attacked.
Musa Illala of the National Emergency Management Agency
described the area as a commuter hub packed with people trying to
catch a bus to their home village ahead of Eid festivals marking
the end of Ramadan.
At least 17 people died in the second blast, he said.
A source close to Buhari who requested anonymity said he
narrowly escaped death when the attacker driving a car packed
with explosives was forced to divert at the last minute, but those
details could not be verified by police.
Buhari came runner-up to Jonathan in Nigeria's 2011 election and
is among the favourites to emerge as the APC's presidential
candidate in polls set for next year.
- Sectarian clashes -
Kaduna, a religiously divided city which was once the political
capital of the north, has seen relatively little Boko Haram violence
in the last 12 months.
Suicide blasts targeting churches in 2012, blamed on the militant
group, sparked sectarian clashes that left hundreds dead.
Human Rights Watch in a report this year warned that religious
tensions remain high and the governor's spokesman said the total
ban on movements was needed to ensure that "mischief makers"
did not use the unrest as a pretext to "cause chaos."
But whether or not the violence spurs a deadly aftermath, the twin
bombings underscore the worsening security situation across
northern Nigeria.
Islamist gunmen have in recent months attacked civilians at will
across the remote northeast, the group's historic stronghold, but
2014 has also seen major unrest in key urban centres.
The capital Abuja has been hit by three separate bombings, while a
double car bombing in the key central city of Jos killed at least
118 people in May.
Jonathan, facing unprecedented pressure to contain the
bloodshed, has asked parliament to approve a $1 billion foreign
loan to upgrade the security services.
Some analysts have described the request as a tacit
acknowledgement by the president that his military is overmatched
by Boko Haram who are blamed for killing more than 10,000
people since 2009.
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