Soldiers
stand guard near a farming village near Maiduguri, northeast Nigeria, on July
3, 2015
|
At least three people
were killed and six others injured Friday in suicide attacks in Nigeria's
northeast Borno state blamed on Boko Haram Islamists, vigilantes told AFP. Two bombers blew
themselves up at a security checkpoint outside Sabon Gari village in Biu
district, 180 kilometres (110 miles) south of state capital Maiduguri, killing
two civilian vigilantes and injuring four people.
Earlier,
a young male bomber riding a motorcycle detonated his explosives in nearby
Kimba village, killing one person and injuring two others.
"Three
people, including two of our colleagues, died in two suicide blasts in Sabon
Gari and Kimba villages," said Mustapha Karimbe, a civilian vigilante from
Biu, 35 kilometres from the blast scenes.
Civilian
vigilantes, assisting the military in fighting Boko Haram jihadists, set up a
checkpoint outside Sabon Gari village following intelligence report that the
Islamists were planning an attack on the village, Karimbe said.
Two
young men who refused to be searched when the bus they were travelling in was
stopped at the checkpoint detonated their explosives as two vigilantes accosted
them, he added.
About
an hour earlier, a female suicide bomber's explosives were detonated when she
was shot by a soldier at the checkpoint after she refused to be searched, but
no one was hurt, Karimbe said
His
account was backed up by fellow vigilante Musa Suleiman.
The
young male suicide bomber rode into Kimba village on a motorcycle, a banned
mode of transport for security reasons "but before people realized his
motive he detonated his explosives," Suleiman said.
"One
person was killed and two others were injured," he said.
Biu
and neighbouring villages have been repeatedly hit by suicide and bomb attacks
blamed on Boko Haram whose six-year old insurgency has killed 17,000 people and
displaced 2.1 million others.
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