The
attacker targetted the St. John’s Catholic Church in the northern city
of Bauchi, where tight security was imposed after a wave church bombings
claimed by the radical Islamist group Boko Haram.
Worshippers
were being screened outside the building when the bomber approached,
ramming his car into the line of people waiting to enter Sunday
services, the head of the Red Cross in Bauchi state, Adamu Abubakar
said.
“We
have three dead in all, including the bomber, a woman and a child.
Forty-eight others were seriously injured in the explosion,” he told
AFP. He said the church building was not damaged in the blast.
Officials said the attack occurred in the Wunti area of Bauchi city, capital of Bauchi state.
Suicide
blasts targetting Christian Sunday services were a near weekly
occurrence in Nigeria earlier this year, but the violence had ebbed
recently.
While
there was no immediate claim of responsibility, the attack resembled
those previously claimed by Boko Haram, blamed for killing more than
1,400 people in northern and central Nigeria since 2010.
Boko
Haram claimed responsiblity for a similar attack on June 3 in Bauchi
city in which a suicide bomber tried to drive a vehicle packed with
explosives into a church, killing at least 15 people and wounding dozens
more.
Since
re-launching its insurgency in 2010, the group’s attacks have grown
increasingly deadly and sophisticated, including suicide bombings at the
UN headquarters in Abuja and an office for one of the country’s most
prominent newspapers.
The
deadliest attack so far was in Kano in January, when at least 185
people died in a series of coordinated bombings and shootings.
Muslims
have often been its victims, but President Goodluck Jonathan warned
that the group was seeking to spark a religious conflict with the series
of attacks on Christians.
Nigeria,
Africa’s most populous nation and largest oil producer, is divided
between a mainly Muslim north and predominately Christian south.
The government recently said it was engaging in back-channel talks in an effort to halt the violence.
A
previous attempt at dialogue this year collapsed when a mediator quit
over leaks to the media and a Boko Haram spokesman said they could not
trust the government.
No comments:
Post a Comment