Six people were killed on Friday when a suicide
bomber blew himself up at a mosque in Damboa,
northeast Nigeria, the army said, in the latest
violence to hit the restive region
.
Nigerian Army spokesman Colonel Sani Usman
said the attack happened at about 5:15 am (0415
GMT) in the town of Damboa, some 90 kilometres
(56 miles) southwest of the Borno state capital,
Maiduguri.
He blamed the attack on “two Boko Haram
terrorists”.
“The first suicide bomber targeted Damboa
Central Mosque but due to stringent security
measures he could not gain entry. Obviously
frustrated, he exploded and died near the central
mosque,” he added.
“However, the second bomber veered off and
gained entry into another smaller mosque and
detonated the bomb, killing himself and six other
worshippers and injuring one other person.
“The wounded have been evacuated to a hospital
while efforts are on to clear the rubble. Troops
and other security agencies have been mobilised
to the area.”
The attack is the latest against a mosque in
northeast Nigeria and the wider Lake Chad
region, as part of a campaign of violence by the
Islamist group against civilian “soft” targets.
On June 27, two would-be suicide bombers were
killed in Maiduguri, as they tried to target an
overnight Ramadan vigil at a mosque on the
Damboa Road.
Three days later, at least 10 people were killed in
the town of Djakana, in northern Cameroon near
the Nigerian border, when a suicide bomber blew
himself up.
On July 4, the Nigerian Army said it thwarted an
attempted suicide bombing by three women
against people displaced by Boko Haram in
Monguno, northeast of Maiduguri.
There has been a relative lull in attacks, as troops
regain control of territory once held by Boko
Haram, whose fighters have been pushed into
remote rural areas towards Lake Chad.
Usman said suspected Boko Haram fighters also
attacked the village of Gaskeri, near the
sprawling internally displaced people’s camp at
Dalori, outside Maiduguri, on Thursday night.
“They killed three civilian vigilantes and looted
foodstuffs. Troops have been mobilised and they
are on the suspected terrorists’ trail,” he added.
The seven-year insurgency has left at least
20,000 people dead in Nigeria and displaced
more than 2.6 million people, heaping pressure
on local authorities in Nigeria, Niger, Cameroon
and Chad.
Aid agencies have warned that some 50,000
children under five are facing severe acute
malnutrition in Borno alone this year because of
food shortages caused by the conflict.
UN assistant secretary-general and regional
humanitarian coordinator Toby Lanzer said in a
statement that “time is running out for the
poorest and most rural of people” in the
northeast.
“A failure to act now will result in deeper and
broader suffering, unlike anything seen to date in
Nigeria’s northeast and a steeper bill for all
concerned to alleviate suffering and stabilise the
situation,” he added.
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