The InfoStride Forum

NEWS and REPORTS => World News => Topic started by: HuffingtonPost on Nov 28, 2014, 09:31 PM

Title: #News: Bombs, Gunfire Kill At Least 35 At Crowded Mosque In Nigeria
Post by: HuffingtonPost on Nov 28, 2014, 09:31 PM


By Nnekule Ikemfuna                

KANO, Nigeria, Nov 28 (Reuters) - Gunmen set off three bombs  and opened fire on worshippers at the central mosque in north  Nigeria's biggest city Kano, killing at least 35 people on  Friday, witnesses and police said, in an attack that bore the  hallmarks of Islamist Boko Haram militants.                

"These people have bombed the mosque. I am face to face with  people screaming," said Chijjani Usman, a local reporter who had  gone to the mosque in the old city to pray.                

The mosque is next to the palace of the emir of Kano, the  second highest Islamic authority in Africa's most populous  country, although the emir himself, former central bank governor  Lamido Sanusi, was not present.                

No one immediately claimed responsibility but suspicion fell  on Boko Haram, a Sunni jihadist movement fighting to revive a  medieval Islamic caliphate in the region.                

Boko Haram regards the traditional Islamic religious  authorities in Nigeria with disdain, considering them a corrupt,  self-serving elite that is too close to the secular government.                

The insurgents have killed thousands in gun and bomb attacks  on churches, schools, police stations, military bases,  government buildings and mosques that do not share their radical  Islamist ideology.                

At least 35 people died on Friday, deputy police  commissioner Sanusi N. Lemo told reporters in Kano.                

"Three bombs were planted in the courtyard to the mosque and  they went off simultaneously," a security source who declined to  be named said.                

"After multiple explosions, they also opened fire. I cannot  tell you the casualties because we all ran away," added a member  of staff at the palace.                

Angry youths blocked the mosque's gates to police, who had  to disperse them with tear gas to gain entry.                                

A MILLION DISPLACED                

The insurgency has forced more than one million people to  flee during its campaign focused on Nigeria's northeast, the Red  Cross told reporters on Friday, an increase on a September U.N.  refugee agency estimate of 700,000.                

Islamic leaders sometimes shy away from direct criticism of  Boko Haram for fear of reprisals. But Kano's emir Sanusi,  angered by atrocities such as the kidnapping of 200 schoolgirls  from the village of Chibok in April, has been increasingly  vocal.                

He was quoted in the local press as calling on Nigerians  this month to defend themselves against Boko Haram. During a  broadcast recitation of the Koran he was reported to have said:                

"These people, when they attack towns, they kill boys and  enslave girls. People must stand resolute ... They should  acquire what they can to defend themselves. People must not wait  for soldiers to protect them."                

Persistent insecurity is dogging President Goodluck  Jonathan's campaign for re-election to a second term in February  2015.     (Additional reporting by Julia Payne, Isaac Abrak and Abraham  Terngu in Abuja; Writing by Tim Cocks; Editing by Andrew  Heavens)
Source: huffingtonPost