A suicide attack
targeting a senior police official’s convoy on Monday has killed 11
people and wounded 20, a rescue source said, with the senior officer
said to be unharmed.
Police said the attack in the Taraba state capital Jalingo saw a
motorcycle ram into the police convoy amid a wave of similar violence
attributed to Islamist group Boko Haram.
Authorities
provided an official death toll of three people, including two
passers-by and the bomber, with a police motorcyclist wounded.
However, the rescue official put the death toll at 11, including a
policeman, with 20 wounded.
“Eleven people died,” the rescue official said on condition of anonymity
because he was not authorised to talk to the press. “One policeman was
among them.
There are 20
injured.”
In describing the attack, police spokesman Ibiang Mbaseki said “a bomber
on a motorcycle rammed into the police rider (motorcycle escort). The
bomb went off. The windshield of the (state) police commissioner’s car
was shattered.”
There was no immediate claim of responsibility and police declined to
name any suspects, though the attack was similar to others carried out
by Islamist group Boko Haram.
“For now, we are
not mentioning anybody as suspects,” said Mbaseki. “An investigation
will be carried out to determine who was responsible.”
Taraba state has not been known to be targeted by Boko Haram, though the
state borders others that have been repeatedly hit by such violence.
The alleged mastermind of a Christmas day attack on a church near the
capital Abuja which killed at least 44 people was re-arrested in Taraba
state in February after having earlier escaped from custody.
Speaking at the
opening of a summit of the six-nation Lake Chad Basin Commission in
Libreville, Chadian President Idriss Deby Itno called for the creation a
joint regional force to battle the spread of Boko Haram.
“I am demanding the creation of a joint deterrence force. We have to
make this decision here today,” he said. “Our basin is exposed to
insecurity because of the permanent threat posed by Boko Haram.”
Officials and experts have repeatedly warned that Boko Haram may be
building ties with Al-Qaeda and expanding beyond Nigeria’s borders to
threaten the entire region.
Nigeria has been
hit by near daily gun-and-bomb attacks, mainly in the country’s north,
that have shaken Africa’s most populous nation and largest oil producer.
On Sunday, attacks on churchgoers in the northern cities of Kano and
Maiduguri left a total of 23 people dead, security sources and an NGO
have said.
Also Sunday, unknown gunmen shot dead three policemen on patrol in an
ambush in northern Katsina state, a police spokesman said Monday.
Taraba is located along the eastern-central border.
Boko Haram’s increasingly bloody insurgency has claimed more than 1,000
lives since mid-2009.
Police and
soldiers have often been the victims, but Christian worshippers have
also been targeted.
The group also claimed responsibility for a suicide attack at UN
headquarters in Abuja which killed at least 25 people last August.
Boko Haram initially claimed to be fighting for the creation of an
Islamic state in Nigeria’s north, but its demands and structure have
become less clear in recent months.
It is believed to have a number of factions, some with political
motives, as well as a hardcore Islamist wing. Criminal groups are also
believed to have carried out violence under the guise of Boko Haram.
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