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Suspected
Islamic extremists struck two state capitals Damaturu and Maiduguri Monday,
with twin blasts at a crowded market and the destruction of a police base.
Based on AFP/AP reports rescue
workers were trying to evacuate the dead and wounded from the Maiduguri market,
the same one where two female suicide bombers killed at least 70 people a week
ago, said trader Bala Dauda.
"I
can't say how many were killed or injured but I have seen very many victims
dripping with blood, others with parts of their bodies dismembered by the
blasts," Dauda told The Associated Press by telephone.
Monday's
blasts also were caused by "two girls," said witness Mallam
Muhammadu.
Police
spokesman Gideon Jubrin said it's too early to give a toll in Maiduguri. There
was no immediate claim of responsibility for the Maiduguri blasts but people
blamed Boko Haram, the Islamic extremist group that has carried out many such
attacks in a 5-year insurgency that has killed thousands and forced hundreds of
thousands from their homes.
In
Damaturu, explosions and gunfire erupted before dawn Monday causing some
residents to flee into the bush and others to cower in their homes. Damaturu,
the provincial capital of Yobe state, is some 135 kilometers (85 miles) west of
Maiduguri, which is the capital of Borno state.
The
militants targeted a rapid-response police base on the outskirts of Damaturu,
said resident Garba Musa.
"It
has been burned down completely," he said.
The
Defense Ministry headquarters said a fighter jet was repelling the attackers. A
helicopter gunship was hovering over the town.
"We
are still under fire," Premium Times news website quoted Yobe state police
Commissioner Marcus Danladi as saying. "Kindly sympathize with us. There
is nothing I can tell you now."
Civil
servant Abdullahi Abba said his family was hiding in the bush. "We've been
hearing these gunshots and bombs since the early hours and felt unsafe staying
at home." He said they hoped to trek to the nearby town of Tarmuwa.
"We
don't know where to hide, the shooting is all over ... We are running for our
lives," said resident Musa Abbas.
The
attacks on the two state capitals show an acceleration of the extremist
violence in northeastern Nigeria.
Boko
Haram, the West African's nation's homegrown Islamic extremist group, has been
striking with increased frequency and deadliness since the military declared
the insurgents had agreed to a ceasefire in September.
On
Friday, bomb blasts and gunfire killed more than 100 people praying at the main
mosque in northern Kano, Nigeria's second largest city.
Boko
Haram is holding a couple dozen cities and towns along Nigeria's northeast
border where it has declared an Islamic caliphate.
The
extremists frequently attack moderate Muslims they accuse of collaborating with
the secular government and are holding hundreds of hostages, including 219
schoolgirls kidnapped from Chibok town.
There
are fears they may be using some kidnapped girls as suicide bombers.
Meanwhile
more than 10 people were killed when two female suicide bombers blew themselves
up at a crowded market in the northeast Nigerian city of Maiduguri on Monday.
"Two
female suicide bombers detonated an explosive in Monday market in two different
locations killing more than 10, and injured many," Borno state police
spokesman Gideon Jibrin said in a text message.
Goni
Abba, a witness at the scene, where two female bombers struck just last
Tuesday, killing more than 45, said: "I counted 10 dead bodies and over 20
others have injuries."
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