Friday, June 05, 2015

Borno blast death toll now 18

REMAINS OF A RAZED CLASSROOM BY INSURGENTS AT GWOZA BEFORE TROOPS OF THE NIGERIAN MILITARY 

RECOVERED THE COMMUNITY, IN BORNO ON THURSDAY
The death toll from Wednesday’s blast in Maiduguri has risen to 18, a civilian vigilante assisting the military against Boko Haram told AFP yesterday.
“We retrieved 18 dead bodies from the scene and many people with injuries,” Danlami Ajaokuta said of the explosion on the city’s Baga Road, which happened at about 17:30 on Wednesday.
Explosives are believed to have been left near a garage opposite a military unit, with many of the victims, roadside mechanics, taking a break from work.
No fewer than six people who died were recovered in the immediate aftermath, Ajaokuta said on Wednesday.
He said “many people” were injured, some of them seriously, and were taken to hospital for treatment.
“The death toll may rise further,” he added.
Early on Saturday morning, Boko Haram fighters shelled the city but were repelled by the military and a suicide bomber later killed 26 at a mosque.
On Tuesday morning, suburbs again came under fire from rocket-propelled grenades and at least 13 people were killed in a suicide attack at a cattle market.
About an hour before the Baga Road attack, residents in the village of Tunkushe, some 12km north of Maiduguri, said a car exploded at a checkpoint.
There were no immediate indications of casualties.
Boko Haram, which was founded in Maiduguri in 2002, has been pushed out of captured territory and towns in northeast Nigeria by a coalition of troops from Nigeria, Niger, Chad and Cameroon.
But sporadic attacks continue. President Buhari has made ending the six-year insurgency a priority for his administration.

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