Suicide bomber kills 48 students in Nigeria
POTISKUM, Nigeria (AP) — A suicide bomber
disguised in a school uniform
detonated explosives at a high school assembly in the northeastern
Nigerian city of Potiskum on Monday, killing at least 48 students,
according survivors and a morgue attendant.
Soldiers rushed to the scene,
grisly with body parts, in the capital of Yobe state, but they were
chased away by a crowd throwing stones and shouting that they are angry
at the military's inability to halt a 5-year-old Islamic insurgency that
has killed thousands and driven hundreds of thousands from their homes.
A
suicide bomb attack in the same city killed 30 people one week ago,
when suspected Boko Haram fighters attacked a religious procession of
moderate Muslims.
Some 2,000
students had gathered for Monday morning's weekly assembly at the
Government Technical Science College when the explosion blasted through
the school hall, according to survivors.
"We were waiting for the
principal to address us, around 7:30 a.m., when we heard a deafening
sound and I was blown off my feet, people started screaming and running,
I saw blood all over my body," 17-year-old student Musa Ibrahim Yahaya
said from the general hospital, where he was being treated for head
wounds.
Hospital records show
79 students were admitted and health workers said they include serious
injuries that may require amputations. The hospital was so overcrowded
that some patients were squashed two to a bed.
A morgue attendant said 48
bodies were brought to the hospital and all appeared to be between the
ages of 11 and 20 years old. He spoke on condition of anonymity because
he is not authorized to give information to reporters.
Survivors
said the bomber appeared to have hidden the explosives in a type of
rucksack popular with students. Months ago Nigeria's military had
reported finding a bomb factory where explosives were being sewn into
rucksacks in the northern city of Kano.
Garba
Alhaji, father of one of the wounded students, said the school did not
have proper security. "I strongly blame the Yobe state government for
not fencing the college," he said, adding that just three months ago a
bomb was discovered in the school and removed by an anti-bomb squad.
The
federal government of President Goodluck Jonathan, who is running for
re-election in February, also had promised more security for schools in
the northeast.
Boko Haram —
the name means "Education is sinful" in the local Hausa language —
attracted international outrage with the April kidnappings of 276 mostly
Christian schoolgirls writing exams at a northeastern boarding school.
Dozens escaped on their own but 219 remain missing. Boko Haram has said
that the schoolgirls have all converted to Islam and been married off to
extremist fighters.
Many
Nigerians are angry that Boko Haram has increased attacks and bombings
since Oct. 17 when the government claimed to have brokered a cease-fire.
Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau has denied negotiating a truce.
No comments:
Post a Comment