Female suicide bombers suspected in deadly Nigeria blasts
Female suicide bombers are suspected to be behind the twin explosions that rattled the northeastern Nigerian city of Maiduguri on Saturday near a refugee camp and a fuel depot, officials said.
The
attacks targeted the city's Bakassi Internally Displaced Persons camp
and the Nigerian National Petroleum Corp.'s Mega Filling Station, the
Nigerian army said in a statement.
At
least nine people were killed and 24 injured in the two explosions,
according to the country's National Emergency Agency (NEMA).
In
the first attack the suspected bomber ran into a crowd at the entrance
of the Bakassi IDP camp, killing five people, the army said.
Ten
minutes later and a mile away, a second blast killed three occupants on
a motorized rickshaw at the entrance of a fuel depot owned by the
National Oil Company. The army puts the total number of dead at 8.
"While
we commiserate with the families of the late victims of this cruel act
and wish those injured speedy recovery, we would like to assure the
public that efforts are ongoing to track those behind the dastardly
acts," an army spokesman said.
"However, it is equally important to reiterate the need for more vigilance and security consciousness among all."
Pictures posted on NEMA's Twitter account show rescue workers at the scene of one of the bombings amid debris and destroyed cars.
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