Boko Haram Islamists
staged three suicide attacks in Nigeria's restive northeast on Friday, leaving
four attackers and two civilian vigilantes dead, police said.
AFP
report continues:
"Aside
from the explosion near a mobile police location in Jiddari, we had two other
suicide bombings along Maiduguri-Gamboru road," Borno state police
commissioner Damian Chukwu told reporters in Maiduguri, epicentre of Boko
Haram's seven-year insurgency.
The
Islamist group have multiplied their attacks in recent days, Chukwu said,
without detailing the incidents.
"This
is about the sixth or seventh suspected suicide attack in the last couple of
days. The police and other security agents are working hard to stop the ugly
trend," he said.
The
first attack took place before dawn when a female suicide bomber blew herself
and another bomber up near a police checkpoint at Jiddari, Borno state police
spokesman Victor Isuku earlier said,
A
third suspected bomber survived and was being questioned.
"At
3:50am today, mobile police personnel on guard duty opposite the federal high
court in Jiddari sighted three suspected suicide bombers comprising two females
and a male running towards their sandbag," Isuku said.
"They
ordered them to a halt for questioning but they refused," he said.
"One of the females detonated the Improvised Explosive Device (IED)
strapped to her body, killing herself and one other male accomplice," he
said.
Later
in the morning a male suicide bomber detonated his explosives after being
stopped at the entrance of a garage on the Maiduguri-Gamboru road where traders
had gathered to travel under military escort.
The
bomber died instantly, police said.
Another
male suicide bomber detonated his explosives on the same road a few meters away
a little later, killing himself and two local vigilantes, assisting the
military to fight the jihadists.
Ahmed
Satomi of the Borno State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA) said five villages
in Monguno had been attacked by Boko Haram insurgents early in the week,
leaving eight dead and dozens injured.
"Boko
Haram gunmen attacked the five villages late Monday and continued until
Tuesday. They killed eight people and injured dozens," he said.
He
said the victims had been evacuated by soldiers who deployed to the area.
Boko
Haram, which seeks to impose strict Islamic sharia law in Nigeria's
mainly-Muslim north, has killed at least 20,000 people and left more than 2.6
million homeless in its six-year insurgency.
A
counter-offensive backed by a regional force has seen the Nigerian military
retake swathes of territory from the insurgents, but the jihadist group still
poses a security threat to civilians.
On
November 1, a truck carrying eight suspected Boko Haram extremists exploded
near a military checkpoint in Maiduguri, killing all the occupants.
Six Die As Police
Confirm Two More Explosions In Maiduguri
TheCable reports that Borno police command on Friday confirmed two more explosions after a separate
suspected suicide bombing in Maiduguri.
Damian
Chukwu, the commissioner of police, made the confirmation while speaking with
journalists in Maiduguri.
“Aside
from the explosion near a mobile police location in Jiddari, we had two other
suicide bombings along Maiduguri-Gamboru road,” Chukwu said.
“In
the first case, a suspected male suicide bomber detonated his explosive after
he was stopped at the entrance of the Muna Garage, killing himself instantly.”
He
said that another suspected male suicide bomber detonated his explosive on the
same road few meters away killing himself and two local vigilantes called
Civilian JTF.
“In
all, we recorded six deaths, comprising four suspected bombers and two
vigilantes,” he said.
“This is about the sixth or seventh suspected suicide attack in the last couple of days, the police and other security agents are working hard to stop the ugly trend.”
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