Civilian group: 56 dead in Nigeria market blast

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MAIDUGURI, Nigeria (AP) — A car bomb in a marketplace in
Maiduguri, the northeast Nigerian city that is the birthplace of Boko
Haram extremism, killed at least 56 people on Tuesday, the leader of a
civilian group that recovered the bodies said.
Sadiq Abba Tijjani,
leader of the Civilian Joint Task Force, told the Associated Press his
group recovered at least 56 dead bodies at the blast site, mostly
elderly women who sold peanuts and lemon juice at the market.
Tijjani said they managed to identify 21 of the dead but the rest "were either burnt or damaged
beyond recognition."
Other
witnesses also estimated the death toll to around 50. Some officials
said only 17 people died in the explosion that ripped through the market
early Tuesday, but officials regularly play down the death toll.
Witnesses
and officials blamed Boko Haram extremists who have been accused of a
series of bomb attacks in the West African nation. The group, which
attracted international attention with its April abduction of more than
200 schoolgirls, has scaled up its activities in recent months,
launching more frequent and deadly attacks.
The inability of the
military to curb attacks has brought international criticism, with the
United Nations noting the government is failing in its duty to protect
citizens. In a statement issued Monday, U.N. Secretary-General Ban
Ki-moon reiterated the readiness of the United Nations "to support
Nigeria as it responds to this challenge in a manner consistent with its
international human rights obligations."
Maiduguri, a city of
more than 1 million people, has suffered from many strikes. In March,
twin car bombs killed more than 50 people at a late-night market where
people were watching a football match on a big screen.
Tuesday’s
explosives were hidden under a load of charcoal in a large vehicle,
according to witnesses who spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of
reprisals.
Stalls, goods and vehicles were reduced to piles of
trash. The burnt-out shells of five vehicles and some tricycle taxis
marked the site of the explosion.
Trader Daba Musa Yobe, who works
near the popular market, said the bomb went off just after the market
opened at 8 a.m., before most traders or customers had arrived.
Witnesses
said the death toll could have been even higher was it not for Ramadan,
the Muslim month of fasting from sunrise to sunset, which meant fewer
people than normal were at the market at that time because they had
stayed up late to eat.
Security forces cordoned off the area for
five hours but had a hard time keeping people out, even though they
warned there could be secondary explosions timed to target rescue
efforts.
Boko Haram has adopted a two-pronged strategy this year
of bombing urban areas and conducting scorched-earth attacks in
northeastern villages where people are gunned down and their homes
burned.
On Sunday, suspected extremists sprayed gunfire on
worshippers in four churches in a northeastern village and torched the
buildings, killing at least 30 people.
Last week, at least 42
people were killed in three blasts around the country, including 24
people at the biggest shopping mall in Nigeria’s central capital Abuja.
It was the third blast in as many months in that city. In May, twin car
bombs at a marketplace also left more than 130 dead in the central city
Jos.
Nigeria’s military announced Monday night that it had busted a
terrorist intelligence cell and arrested a businessman who
"participated actively" in the mass abduction of schoolgirls that caused
outrage around the world.
It was unclear if the first arrest of a
suspect in the kidnappings could help in rescuing the at least 219
girls who remain captive. Boko Haram is threatening to sell the girls
into marriage and slavery if Nigeria’s government does not exchange them
for detained insurgents.
Nigeria’s President Goodluck Jonathan on Monday condemned the recent attacks.
"The
federal government and national security agencies will continue to
intensify ongoing efforts to end Boko Haram’s senseless attacks until
the terrorists are routed and totally defeated," he said in a statement.

Faul reported from Lagos, Nigeria.

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