“I counted at least 15 dead bodies. I think they were being taken to the Amino Kano teaching hospital,” the witness, who did not wish to be identified, said, adding that he saw many more people being treated for injuries. A security source said at least 15 people were dead and a source at the hospital told Reuters by phone that he had seen 10-15 dead bodies brought in with gunshot wounds. There was no immediate claim of responsibility.
Radical Islamist sect Boko Haram, which wants to carve out an Islamic state in northern Nigeria, has killed hundreds in bomb and gun attacks this year. It mainly targets police and authority figures but has also attacked churches. “The attack took place in one of the lecture theatres used as a place of worship by Christians. For sure there are casualties but I can’t say how many,” Ikedichi Iweha, an army spokesman, told Reuters.
“The elements came, used explosives and guns to attack them. We have repelled them and cordoned off the area,” Iweha said. Red Cross officials said they were trying to get access to the area but there were no details on casualties. Africa’s most populous nation of more than 160 million is split roughly equally between a largely Christian south and a mostly Muslim north.
Suicide car bombers targeted the offices of Nigerian newspaper This Day in the capital Abuja and in Kaduna last week, killing at least four people in coordinated strikes. This Day is based in southern Nigeria and is broadly supportive of President Goodluck Jonathan’s government – the main target of Boko Haram’s insurgency.
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Sunday, April 29, 2012
Bomb blast at Bayero Univeristy, Kano
Gunmen killed at least 15 people and wounded many more in
an attack on a university theater being used by Christian worshippers
in Nigeria’s northern city of Kano on Sunday, a witness said. It was
the latest in a spate of attacks on churches and on Christian holidays
in the north of the country, which Nigerian authorities and diplomats
believe are part of an attempt to stoke a religious conflict. Security
sources said there was sporadic gunfire in other parts of the city which
they believe was from attackers who were fleeing from the army at the
university.
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