#News: 'Suicide blast' hits Nigeria's Shias

Started by BBC, Nov 03, 2014, 07:31 PM

BBC

line  Who are Boko Haram?  A screengrab from a video released by Boko Haram, showing its leader Abubakar Shekau delivering a speech - 31 October 2014  
  • Founded in 2002
  • Initially focused on opposing Western education - Boko Haram means "Western education is forbidden" in the Hausa language
  • Launched military operations in 2009 to create Islamic state
  • Thousands killed, mostly in north-eastern Nigeria - also attacked police and UN headquarters in capital, Abuja
  • Some three million people affected
  • Declared terrorist group by US in 2013
Who are Boko Haram?

Profile: Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau

line  Although witnesses reported that 20 people had died in the blast, a Shia representative said the explosion had killed 15 of them and the other five had been shot dead by the security forces, BBC Nigeria correspondent Will Ross reports from the main city, Lagos.

About 50 people are said to have been wounded in the blast.    

One man, Mohammed Gana, told Reuters news agency that his brother had been killed in the attack.

People at the site of a bomb blast at a bus station in Gombe, north-eastern Nigeria - 31 October 2014 Boko Haram has carried out a spate of bombings in Nigeria  He counted 23 bodies at the scene, he said.

Resident Yusuf Abdullahi told Reuters the explosion took place near his home.

"I heard a very heavy explosion as if it happened in my room," he said.

This is not the first time that Shia officials in Nigeria have accused the military of killing their members, our correspondent says.  

In July, they accused soldiers in the northern town of Zaria of opening fire on a demonstration, killing three sons of Shia leader Sheikh Ibraheem Zakzaky.

Black-shirted followers of a Sha Muslim sect carry a banner depicting their leader Ibrahim Zakzaky  on 10 February 2005 in the northern Nigerian city of Kano Sheikh Ibraheem Zakzaky is influential in Shia circles in Nigeria  He advocates the creation of a Shia-oriented Islamic state in Nigeria, and his supporters have been involved in many clashes with the security forces over the decades.

Boko Haram has waged an insurgency in Nigeria since 2009, with some 2,000 civilians killed this year alone, rights activists say.

It has repeatedly targeted Christians and rival Muslim groups.

In July, it was blamed for bombing an open-air mosque in Potiskum, killing four people.

Potiskum is in Yobe, one of three states where Nigeria's President Goodluck Jonathan imposed a state of emergency in May 2013 after vowing to crush the insurgency.

Boko Haram has intensified attacks since then and sparked global outrage in April by abducting more than 219 schoolgirls.

Last week, Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau rejected government claims that the two sides had agreed a ceasefire in talks brokered by Chad.

Mr Shekau also denied that Boko Haram planned to release the schoolgirls.

All the girls had converted to Islam, and had been married off, he said.  


Source: BBC