Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Boko Haram attack leaves 30 dead in Kano market

Security forces patrolled an extensive market in Nigeria's northeastern city of Maiduguri on Tuesday where an assault by suspected Islamists killed some 30 people, vendors and residents said.


Gunmen believed to be members of the Islamist sect Boko Haram on Monday afternoon stormed the fish section of Baga market and sprayed stallholders and vendors with bullets, traders said.


The market opened on Tuesday but security forces shut all entry gates except one directly overlooking a police station.


"Most traders in this section of the market have not opened largely out of mourning for their colleagues killed in the attacks of yesterday. We have lost many colleagues," Bunu Ahmad said on the phone.


Witnesses and medics said some 30 people died when the gunmen opened fire and set off bombs inside the market, in what appeared to be a retaliatory attack for the arrest of a suspected Islamist inside the market last week.


The military denied there were any civilian victims, saying it shot eight of the attackers.


Lieutenant Colonel Hassan Mohammed, spokesman of a special military unit in the city said the military "immediately came to the rescue of the situation and safely detonated three bombs planted by members of the sect and shot and killed eight members of the sect."


Some funerals of civilian victims of the attack took place on Tuesday.


One fish vendor who asked not to be named said he lost two brothers in the attack. He said there was an explosion but he and his brothers chose not to run away at that stage.


"A few minutes after, one of my brothers shouted 'Oh! they have killed me', then another one similarly shouted, 'they have also shot me'. That was when I fled," he said shortly after burying the brothers aged 29 and 31.


"More than 25 people were killed," he said.


Due to the emergency rule imposed on Maiduguri on December 31, only the military responds to any emergency situations in the city, but a relief agency source said from accounts given by witnesses "the death toll from the attack is around 30."


A nurse at Maiduguri hospital on Monday told AFP "the number of dead could not be less than 30," adding it was difficult to establish a precise death toll as security forces did not take the bodies to the morgue but allowed relatives to claim their loved ones for immediate burial.


Maiduguri, the capital of Borno state and the home base of Boko Haram, has seen some of the worst violence blamed on the extremist sect, which has focused its attacks on the mainly Muslim north.


The insurgency blamed on Boko Haram has killed more than 200 people already this year, including at least 185 in coordinated gun and bomb attacks in Nigeria's second city of Kano on January 20, its deadliest ever strike.


The shadowy sect has said it wants to create a Islamic state across Nigeria's deeply-impoverished mainly Muslim north and some analysts believe the Islamists are tied to like-minded extremist groups such as Al-Qaeda.


Other analysts insist the sect is pursuing a narrowly domestic agenda.


AFP


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Power generation in Nigeria has increased by 40 percent

The Minister of Power, Prof. Barth Nnaji, says the nation’s current power generation is 4, 400 megawatts, representing more than 40 per cent of the expectation in 2012.


Nnaji disclosed this on Monday at the opening ceremony of a gymnasium built for workers at Egbin Power Station in Lagos.



He said that the power generation had increased by more than 40 per cent since President Goodluck Jonathan was elected in May, 2011.


“So, this is a tremendous achievement for the president and the government to have improved power supply that way.


“That is why you see people all over the country saying there is availability of power and that they are receiving power now better than before,’’ he said.


Nnaji said that Nigerians should not bother about the amount of power generated, stressing that there were many things to show for it.


He said that discussions were going on between government and electricity workers union in respect of their severance packages and salary increase.


It will be recalled that the minister, had on Feb.17,  said that the nation could achieve 9,000 megawatts by December.


Nnaji had also said that the country was losing 1,500 megawatts of electricity due to gas shortage (NAN).


Vanguard


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Power generation drops to 3,200MW 







Monday, February 20, 2012

Video - Bomb blast near Church in Suleja



Five people were injured in a bomb blast near a church in the Nigerian town of Suleja. 

Soldiers cordoned off the area maintaining a high profile presence on the streets.

Officials say the region has been infiltrated by militants from the Boko Haram Islamist
sect which is waging an insurgency against the Nigerian government.


Related stories: Boko Haram attack Churches on Christmas day - 40 dead


Video - Boko Haram attacks keeping Christians in hiding




Friday, February 17, 2012

Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab "Underwear Bomber" sentenced to life in prison


A Nigerian, Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, who is being prosecuted by a United States federal court for trying to blow a Detriot-bound airline on December 25, 2009, has been sentenced to life imprisonment


Delivering his judgement yesterday over the matter, Judge Nancy Edmunds held that the convict, who pleaded 'guilty' in October last year to about eight -count charge, deserved to be put behind bars for the rest of his life for terrorism.


Judge Edmunds added that the courtroom had "heard some moving testimony" yesterday but noted that Abdulmutallab did not show remorse for his actions. "This was an act of terrorism that cannot be quibbled with," Edmunds said.


According to Edmunds, the court will have no ability to control Abdulmutallab from further acting on his intentions.


"I believe he poses a significant ongoing threat to safety of American citizens everywhere. There is no rationale, no excuse for blowing up a plane and trying to kill hundreds of innocent people," the US Prosecutor Cathleen Corken argued on Thursday.


During the sentence hearing in the court, passengers aboard the Christmas Day 2009 flight confronted AbdulMutallab who entered the courtroom wearing khaki clam diggers, white socks, slip-on shoes, a white skull cap and handcuffs, telling him he had failed as a terrorist.


Though the convict ignored the dramatic statements from fellow passengers aboard the flight, one of them named, Shama Choper from Montreal shouted and said: "I'm standing here today to see goodness win over evil,"


When contacted, the Nigerian Ambassador to the United States, Prof. Ade Adefuye declined comments, saying he would not want to comment on the sentencing without the directives from the appropriate quarters.


Leadership


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Video - Trial of Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab




Thursday, February 16, 2012

Militant group storm prison in Kogi and free 118 inmates

Attackers have stormed a federal prison in Nigeria with heavy gunfire and explosives, killing one guard and freeing at least 118 inmates in a new assault, according to an official.

The details of the prison attack in Koton-Karifi, a town in Kogi state, just south of Nigeria's central capital Abuja, were announced on Thursday.


According to Kayode Odeyemi, the Nigeria Prisons Service spokesman, the men attacked just after 7pm local time on Wednesday, fighting through the prison gate and killing one guard in the process.


Al Jazeera's Yvonne Ndege, reporting from Abuja, spoke to witnesses who described the attackers as heavily armed and riding motorbikes.


"Witnesses said the group basically bombed its way into the prison, creating a scene of complete carnage. In the ensuing chaos, between 100 and 200 prisoners escaped," Ndege said.


Hadijha Aminu, a local prison official, said guards still had not completed a head count and did not know how many prisoners actually were inside the prison at the time of the attack.


Investigation launched

The government said an investigation into the attack had begun.


"One does not really know why'' the men attacked, Odeyemi said. "It might be that some of the armed robbers are trying to free the armed robbers there awaiting trial.''

Odeyemi said he did not know if the prison held any members of the radical Islamist group known as Boko Haram, which has been plaguing the country with violence over the last year.

But Al Jazeera's Ndege said: "The belief is that they were trying to free Boko Haram suspects; there were about 20 Boko Haram suspects awaiting trial inside the prison."  

Boko Haram launched a similar massive prison break in Bauchi state in September 2010 that freed about 700 inmates there.


The style of the attack on Wednesday, which apparently used explosives and heavy gunfire, matched that
previous assault by Boko Haram.


Members of the group have been blamed for killing at least 286 people this year alone, according to an Associated Press news agency count.


Violent campaign

Boko Haram's violence comes as part of a campaign which its leader, Abubakar Shekau, says is aimed at avenging Muslim deaths, freeing imprisoned members and pushing for strict Islamic law across multi-ethnic Nigeria, a nation of more than 160 million people.


No group immediately claimed responsibility for the prison attack, and authorities no suspects were immediately in mind.

If Boko Haram carried out Wednesday night's attack, it would be the farthest strike south the group has made. Nigeria is largely split between a Christian south and a Muslim north.

Most of Boko Haram's previous attacks have taken place largely in the north.

Nigeria's prisons remain overcrowded and understaffed, with the majority of those imprisoned awaiting trials for years that likely will never come.

A 2007 study by Amnesty International, the UK-based rights organisation, called the system "appalling", with children remaining locked up with their parents and guards routinely bribed by inmates.

Despite pledges by the government to reform the system, it remains largely the same today.

Our correspondent said Thursday's prison attack will be another public relations setback for the government.

"Nigeria's security services are under tremendous pressure to control Boko Harem and this prison break will be a huge embarrassment," Ndege said.


Aljazeera


Related stories: Boko Haram attack Churches on Christmas day - 40 dead 


Video - Nigeria's fight against Boko Haram