Fifteen months after its last attack on the capital city, the
extremist Boko Haram sect ferociously returned to Abuja Friday,
simultaneously bombing locations in two satellite towns and killing at
least 15 people.
The terrorist group had been effectively fenced away from the
capital since it attacked a shopping plaza -Emab – in the Wuse 2
District of the city on June 24, 2014, killing at least 21 and injuring
17 others, according to police.
But despite the huge fortification of the capital territory against
attacks – through extensive roadblocks and security patrols – the
terrorists sneaked in Friday, killing many.
In the first attack, the insurgents descended on Kuje, a town few
kilometres from the city centre, blowing up a market and a police
station.
An official of the National Emergency Management Agency, Ishaya
Chonoko, said 13 people died in that attack, with 20 others injured.
But almost simultaneously, another bomb sounded in Nyanya, one of the
most populated towns in Abuja, which had suffered similar attacks in
the past.
Mr. Chonoko said two persons were killed in the attack while 19 were injured.
Mr Chonoko said the corpses of the two dead persons and one critically injured persons were taken to the Asokoro General Hospital.
Mr Chonoko said the corpses of the two dead persons and one critically injured persons were taken to the Asokoro General Hospital.
He said the remaining 18 persons were receiving treatment at the Nyanya General Hospital.
Rescue operations were ongoing Saturday morning, NEMA said, implying the death toll could rise.
The FCT Commissioner of Police, Wilson Inalegwu, confirmed the bomb attacks to PREMIUM TIMES.
No group has claimed responsibility for the attacks but security and
rescue agencies believe the bombings have the imprimatur of the Boko
Haram sect, which has launched similar attacks in the past.
The explosions were the first in Abuja since President Muhammadu Buhari took office in May, with a pledge to defeat Boko Haram.
The president gave the Nigerian military up to November to end the insurgency that has killed over 20000 people since 2009.
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