No fewer than 120 died and 270 were injured on Friday as the
violent Boko Haram sect bombed the 10,000 capacity Kano Central Mosque where
the Emir, Alhaji Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, usually leads prayers.
About 10 gunmen went on a shooting spree after the blast at
the mosque, which is close to the Emir of Kano’s palace.
The emir was said to have
travelled to Saudi Arabia late on Thursday night from Paris.
Witnesses said the incident
happened just as residents were getting set for Friday prayers.
“The attackers have bombed
the mosque. I saw people screaming,” a local reporter who resides in Kano,
Chijjani Usman, told Reuters.
Another eyewitness told the British Broadcasting Corporation
that he had counted over 50 bodies immediately after the blasts.
Also, the Editor, BBC Hausa Service, Mansur Liman, was
quoted as saying that people had witnessed “horrible” scenes in a nearby
hospital.
One eyewitness, who spoke with the BBC’s Focus on Africa,
said, “The imam was about to start prayer when he saw somebody in a car trying
to force himself into the mosque. But when people stopped him, he detonated the
explosions. People started running helter-skelter.”
Another worshipper, Aminu Abdullahi, who also spoke to AFP,
said, “Two bombs exploded, one after the other, in the premises of the Grand
Mosque seconds after the prayers had started.”
“A third one went off in a nearby road close to the
Qadiriyya Sufi order. The blasts were followed by gunshots by the police to
scare off potential attacks.”
His account was backed up by another witness, Hajara Tukur,
who said she lives nearby.
A senior rescue official confirmed that several bodies had
been brought to just one Kano area hospital, while over 126 people had been
admitted with injuries at three facilities.
“Those figures are going to climb,” he told AFP on condition
of anonymity, as he was not authorised to speak to the media.
A military official, Capt. Ikechukwu Eze, also said scores
of people were feared killed and many others injured in the attack.
A check by one of our correspondents at the mortuaries of
both the Murtala Mohammed Specialist Hospital and the Nasarawa Hospital in the
heart of the city showed they were filled with bodies of victims of the blasts
while some of them littered the ground.
Meanwhile, two suspected bomber were said to have been
arrested at the scene of the incident, just as youths took to the street to
protest what they called negligence by the police for not doing enough to
protect the lives and property of the people.
The Kano State Police Command’s Public Relations Officer,
Mustapha Abubakar,confirmed the incident but declined to give the casualty.
The emir had recently called for people to arm themselves
against Islamist militant group Boko Haram.
Earlier this month, the emir told a prayer meeting that
people should “acquire what they need” to protect themselves.
The Boko Haram terrorist group has killed more than 2,000
people this year, according to rights groups’ reports.
The Kano blasts came after a bomb attack was also foiled at
a mosque in Maiduguri on Friday morning; five days after two female suicide
bombers killed over 45 people in the city.
The Emir of Kano last week doubted the Nigerian troops’
ability to protect civilians and end the insurgency.
This had prompted his advice to Kano residents to arm
themselves against Boko Haram attacks.
The Emir of Kano is an influential figure in Nigeria, which
is home to more than 80 million Muslims, most of who live in the North.
Boko Haram has repeatedly attacked Kano before. On November
14, a suicide bomb attack at a filling station killed six people, including
three policemen.
In Maiduguri, the capital of Borno State, civilian
vigilantes said they had discovered a suspected remote-controlled device
planted in the Gamboru Market area of the city.
It was successfully defused by the police bomb squad but as
the bomb was being made safe, another device exploded nearby. There were no
casualties, as the area had been cordoned off.
“Our assumption is that the bombs were planted ahead of
Friday prayers in the mosque just nearby,” civilian vigilante Babakura Adam
said.
“Of course, it is Boko Haram’s handiwork because in the last
few days several arrests have been made of suspected female suicide bombers.”
Adam said the arrests were made on Wednesday and Thursday.
Fears have grown in Maiduguri about an upsurge in Boko Haram
attacks, after the militant Islamists took over more than two dozen towns in
Borno and two neighbouring states in recent months.
Meanwhile, President Goodluck Jonathan on Friday promised that
the attackers would be held accountable.
He spoke in a statement at the commissioning of the Federal
High Court complex in Asaba, Delta state.
The President, who spoke through the Governor of Delta
State, Dr. Emmanuel Uduaghan, commended the Chief Judge and other justices in
the state for their support for government’s resolve to hold accountable all
the perpetrators of terrorist acts across the country.
He said the presence of a high court in virtually all the
states of the federation was a good development as it would bring justice
closer to the people.
Jonathan said, “I have been duly informed that the practice
directions issued by the court has contributed significantly to the reduction
of trial delays and engendered speedy trial of terrorism and allied offences.
“This is in tandem with this administration’s determined
efforts to expand access to justice for the people and ensure that Nigerians
are able to access the courts for the purposes of resolving their disputes.”
The President also directed all security agencies in the
country to launch what he called a full-scale investigation into the blast that
occurred at the Central Mosque in Kano.
He asked them to leave no stone unturned until all terror
agents across the country are apprehended and prosecuted.
Jonathan gave the directive in a statement by his Special
Adviser on Media and Publicity, Dr. Reuben Abati, in which he described the
Kano incident as a heinous attack.
In the face of the attacks however, the President called on
all Nigerians not to despair “in this moment of great trial in our nation’s
history.”
He asked them to remain united to confront the common enemy.
He appealed to them to remain vigilant and cooperate with security agencies to
win the on-going war against terror.
The statement read, “President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan
extends heartfelt condolences to the people and Government of Kano State over
the heinous attack on the Central Mosque in Kano, earlier today.
“He commiserates with all the families who lost their loved
ones. The President calls on relief agencies and medical personnel to deploy
every possible effort to assist the injured, and the general public to heed the
call for the donation of blood by the hospitals where the injured are being treated.
“The President has further directed the security agencies to
launch a full-scale investigation and to leave no stone unturned until all
agents of terror undermining the right of every citizen to life and dignity,
are tracked down and brought to justice.
“The President reaffirms that terrorism in all its forms and
manifestation is a despicable and unjustifiable threat to our society. He
reiterates the determination of the government to continue to take every step
to put an end to the reprehensible acts of all groups and persons involved in
acts of terrorism.
“President Jonathan calls on all Nigerians not to despair in
this moment of great trial in our nation’s history but to remain united to
confront the common enemy.
“The President is confident that no terrorist act against
fellow citizens will destroy the Nigerian spirit to remain positive, resolute
and united in the quest for lasting peace and security in the country.
“He appeals to all Nigerians to remain vigilant and
cooperate actively with our security agencies to win the on-going war against
terror.”
The Northern socio-cultural group, the Arewa Consultative
Forum, described the attack as wicked, callous and barbaric.
The ACF, through its National Publicity Secretary, Muhammad
Ibrahim in Kaduna on Friday, said the group received the news of the blasts
with shock and disbelief, adding that the several attacks in some part of the
North in recent time were most disturbing.
According to the ACF, the insecurity situation in the region
is a clear manifestation of the Federal Government’s inability to protect the
lives and property of Nigerians.
The Forum, therefore, called on the Federal Government to
deploy all its apparatus to areas that are being confronted with Boko Haram
insurgency.
A statement issued by the group read, “The Arewa
Consultative Forum learnt with shock and disbelief the three bomb explosions
that occurred in the Central Mosque near the Emir’s palace in Kano city. The
bomb blast aimed at Muslims in the mosque that left many dead and scores of
others injured was wicked, callous and barbaric.
“The recent bomb explosions in Yola, Maiduguri, Azare,
Kontagora and many other towns in the North coupled with the daily killing of
innocent people by insurgents are very disturbing and worrisome.
“This insecurity situation that has engulfed the North is a
clear manifestation of Federal Government’s inability to protect the people as
intelligence and equipment required to contain the situation appears lacking.
“ACF urges the people of Kano in particular to exercise some
restrain, remain calm and avoid taking the law into their hands or blamed
innocent people that have lived with them peacefully. We equally call upon the
people to unite and protect themselves through intelligence sharing with
security agencies.”
The ACF, however, appealed to the Kano State Government and
other states rocked by bomb explosions in the last one week to provide free
medical treatment to the injured victims.
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