Suicide blasts in NE Nigeria kill at least 31: official, local militia

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KANO, Nigeria, June 17, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Suspected Boko Haram jihadists
killed at least 31 people in a twin suicide bomb attack on a town in
northeast Nigeria, a local official and militia leader told AFP on Sunday.

Two blasts ripped through the town of Damboa in Borno state on Saturday
evening targeting people returning from celebrating the Eid al-Fitr holiday,
in an attack bearing all the hallmarks of Boko Haram.

Following the suicide bombings, the jihadists fired rocket-propelled
grenades into the crowds that had gathered at the scene of the attacks,
driving the number of casualties higher.

“There were two suicide attacks and rocket-propelled grenade explosions in
Damboa last night which killed 31 people and left several others injured,”
said militia leader Babakura Kolo.

Two suicide bombers detonated their explosives in Shuwari and nearby
Abachari neighbourhoods in the town around 10:45 pm (2145GMT), killing six
residents, said Kolo, speaking from the state capital Maiduguri, which is 88
kilometres from the town.

“No one needs to be told this is the work of Boko Haram,” Kolo said.

A local government official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity,
confirmed the death toll.

“The latest death toll is now 31 but it may increase because many among the
injured may not survive,” said the official.

“Most of the casualties were from the rocket projectiles fired from outside
the town minutes after two suicide bomber attacked,” he said.

The jihadist group has deployed suicide bombers, many of them young girls,
in mosques, markets and camps housing people displaced by the nine-year
insurgency which has devastated Nigeria’s northeast.

On May 1 at least 86 people were killed in twin suicide blasts targeting a
mosque and a nearby market in the town of Mubi in neighbouring Adamawa state.

Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari came into power in 2015 vowing to stamp
out Boko Haram but the jihadists continue to stage frequent attacks,
targeting both civilians and security forces.

The militants stormed the Government Girls Technical College in Dapchi on
February 19, seizing over 100 schoolgirls in a carbon copy of the abduction
in Chibok in 2014 that caused global outrage.