Sunday, April 8, 2012

VOA News: Africa: Easter Bomber Strikes in Northern Nigeria

VOA News: Africa
Africa Voice of America
Easter Bomber Strikes in Northern Nigeria
Apr 8th 2012, 17:05

A bombing in northern Nigeria killed at least 20 people and wounded several others on Easter Sunday. No one immediately claimed responsibility, though many suspect the militant Islamist group Boko Haram, which is known to target Christians around holidays. 

Police say a car laden with explosives blew up on a main city street in the northern city of Kaduna Sunday morning at 8:45 a.m. local time

Some suspect the intended target was a nearby Christian church.

Kaduna police spokesman Aminu Lawal told VOA that police are still investigating where the bomber was headed.

"The church also is situated by the roadside and it is not far from the roundabout so maybe he wanted to pass through there but when he discovered the security men were at alert then he could not be able to approach that particular area," he said.

Security has been ramped up throughout northern Nigeria after security forces said they thwarted several plots to attack Christians during the Easter weekend.

The extremist group Boko Haram is known to target Christians during holidays.

Boko Haram claimed responsibility for Christmas Eve bombings in 2010 and Christmas Day attacks in 2011 that each killed dozens of people, primarily Christians, in northern Nigeria.

The leader of a Christian interfaith association in Kaduna, David Obadiah, arrived at the scene Sunday just after the latest blast.

He said emergency workers were rushing more than a dozen critically wounded people from the scene and the street was littered with burned-out motorcycles and what was left of the bomber's vehicle.

"Honestly one cannot say precisely that the target is a Christian church but today is Easter Sunday and at the time that the bomb was detonated, accidentally or whatever, it was during church services because people are about going to church and some were in the church already," said Obadiah.

He said he worried that jumping to conclusions would lead to widespread panic.

Kaduna is in Nigeria's volatile Middle Belt, which serves as the dividing line between a mainly Muslim north and a mainly Christian south. Religious and ethnic tensions have triggered violence there that has killed hundreds in recent years.

Some accuse Boko Haram of attacking Christians in that area in the hopes of stoking tensions.

Human Rights Watch says Boko Haram has killed more than 1,000 people since its resurgence in 2010.

Celebrating Easter Mass in Rome, Pope Benedict denounced what he called "savage terrorist attacks" in Nigeria.

Pope Benedict said he hopes the joy of Easter may grant Nigeria the strength needed to take up anew the building of a society which is peaceful and respectful of the religious freedom of its citizens.

The Nigerian government has struggled to contain the growing security threat as factions of varying extremism have split off from the core Boko Haram cell.

Boko Haram's name in the Hausa language means "Western education is sacrilege." The group wants to impose Islamic law in northern Nigeria.

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