Islamic group behind Nigeria blast

A bomb blast at a police beer garden killed at least 10 people in the troubled northeastern Nigerian city of Maiduguri where Islamists are active.

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A bomb blast at a police beer garden killed at least 10 people Sunday in the troubled northeastern Nigerian city of Maiduguri where Islamists are active, a military source and a witness said.

Hours earlier, a leading politician was shot dead in the same city, while police sources and residents reported a wave of shootings overnight Saturday that killed nine people, including three retired police officers.

"The bomb was planted at the middle of the 'mammy market' and at least 10 people have been killed and several others seriously injured from the explosion," said an army officer who prefered not to be named.

The so-called mammy market beer gardens are open air pubs and eateries found around police or military barracks, open to both security personnel and civilians.

Brigadier-General Jack Okechukwu Nwaogbo, the commander of a crack military unit deployed a week ago to curb the unrest in the area, confirmed the attack, saying they had so far recorded eight deaths.

"There has been a bomb explosion at a market belonging to the police in Wulari area of the city," Nwaogbo told AFP on the phone from Maiduguri.

"So far we have eight dead and 13 injured. These are from those counted at the scene," he later said.

Umar Kaulaha, a resident in the area said he had heard a "loud bang followed by dark clouds of smoke from the beer garden".

"There was confusion and horrified cries as people scampered to safety. I saw three military vans leaving the neighbourhood with the dead and the wounded from the blast," Kaulaha said.

"From my estimation, around a dozen people may have died," he added.

The open beer garden was a popular spot attracting large crowds of drinkers especially on Sundays, Kaulaha said.

Hours before the attack, a politician of the state's ruling party the All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP), was shot and killed near his house in another part of the city.

Two motorcycle riding gunmen shot Mustapha Ba'le in the head, and sped off, a senior police officer said.

And overnight Saturday, gunmen went from house to house Saturday night shooting their victims in targeted attacks, a senior police officer said on condition of anonymity.

"The attackers went straight to the homes of their victims and shot them dead between 11 pm (2200 GMT) and midnight (2300 GMT) and got away," he added.

"It is obvious the attackers were members of Boko Haram."

The Islamist sect is the prime suspect for all of the weekend's attacks, as well as for an attack on a civilian beer garden in the same city last Sunday, which left at least 25 dead and 30 wounded.

Although no one has claimed responsibility for the attacks, they bore their hallmark.

The extremist sect has in the last year carried out bombings and shot dead leading figures in the region.

And it claimed responsibility for a May 29 bomb attack on a beer garden in a military barracks in northern Bauchi city that killed 13 people and injured 30 others.

The attack happened the same day President Goodluck Jonathan was sworn into office.

The group has also claimed responsibility for the June 16 bomb attack on police headquarters in the Nigerian capital Abuja that killed at least two people, including a policeman.

They said they had been aiming for the national police chief.

The group has targeted military and police personnel, community and religious leaders, politicians, public facilities churches and a prison.

Boko Haram -- the name means "Western education is sin" -- launched an uprising in 2009 which was put down by a brutal military assault that left hundreds dead, most of them members of the sect.

The group is fighting to establish an Islamic state in northern Nigeria.




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Source: AFP

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