At least 67 people died in a wave of bombings and shootings carried out in northeast Nigeria overnight, officials said Saturday, as frightened mourners left their homes to begin burying their dead.
A radical Muslim sect known locally as Boko Haram  claimed responsibility Saturday for the attacks, which represent the  most coordinated and wide-ranging assault yet in their increasingly  bloody sectarian fight with Nigeria's weak central government. The sect,  which wants the strict implementation of Shariah law across the nation  of more than 160 million people, promised to carry out more attacks.
The fighting centered around Damaturu, the capital of Yobe state, Nigerian Red Cross official Ibrahim Bulama  said. The attack started Friday with a car bomb exploding outside a  three-story building used as a military office and barracks in the city,  with many uniformed security agents dying in the blast, Bulama said.
Gunmen  then went through the town, blowing up a First Bank PLC branch and  attacking at least three police stations and some churches, leaving them  in rubble, he said. Gunfire continued through the night and gunmen  raided the village of Potiskum near the capital as well, witnesses said,  leaving at least two people dead there.
On  Saturday morning, people began hesitantly leaving their homes, seeing  the destruction left behind, including military and police vehicles  burned by the gunmen, with the burned corpses of the drivers who died in  their seats.
Bulama spoke to  The Associated Press by telephone Saturday morning from a common Muslim  burial ground in the city as his family buried a relative and friend, a  police officer who died after suffering a gunshot wound to the head in  the fighting.
"There's that fear that something might possibly happen again," he said.
State government officials did not respond to repeated requests for comment Saturday.The attacks around Damaturu came after four separate bombings struck Maiduguri,  about 80 miles (130 kilometers) east. One blast detonated around noon  outside the El-Kanemi Theological College where parents had gathered.  Police said others had entered the college grounds to attend Friday  prayers at a mosque located on its campus.
Witnesses  who spoke to the AP said they saw ambulances carry away at least six  wounded people from the site. Another bombing alongside a road in  Maiduguri killed four people, local police commissioner Simeon Midenda  said.
A short time later,  suicide bombers driving a black SUV attempted to enter a base for the  military unit charged with protecting the city from Boko Haram fighters,  military spokesman Lt. Col. Hassan Ifijeh Mohammed said. The SUV  couldn't enter the gate and the explosives were detonated outside of the  base, which damaged several buildings in the military's compound,  Mohammed said.
Mohammed said  blasts occurred at three other places in Maiduguri besides the base,  with no one being killed. However, government officials routinely  downplay such attacks in Nigeria over political considerations.
On  Saturday, a Boko Haram spokesman claimed responsibility for the attacks  in an interview with The Daily Trust, the newspaper of record across  Nigeria's Muslim north. A Boko Haram spokesman using the nom de guerre  Abul-Qaqa promised that "more attacks are on the way."
"We  will continue attacking federal government formations until security  forces stop their excesses on our members and vulnerable civilians," the  spokesman said.
His comments  come as human rights activists say soldiers have beaten and killed  civilians while trying to search for the sect in Maiduguri.
Boko  Haram's attacks occurred ahead of Eid al-Adha, or the feast of  sacrifice, when Muslims around the world slaughter sheep and cattle in  remembrance of Abraham's near-sacrifice of his son. Police elsewhere in  the country had warned of violence ahead of the celebration in Nigeria, a  country largely split between a Christian south and a Muslim north. On  Wednesday, police in Maiduguri had said they broke up a plot to bomb the  city over the holiday.
Boko  Haram apparently has split into three factions, increasing the danger  for Nigeria, the AP has learned. One faction remains moderate and  welcomes an end to the violence, another wants a peace agreement with  rewards similar to those offered to a different militant group in 2009.
The  third faction, though, refuses to negotiate and remains the most  radical. This faction is in contact with al-Qaida's North Africa branch  and likely the Somalia-based terror group al-Shabab, a diplomat said on  condition of anonymity according to embassy orders.
That  sect likely is responsible for the increasingly violent and  sophisticated attacks carried out in the sect's name. In August, Boko  Haram claimed responsibility for a suicide car bombing at the United  Nations headquarters in Nigeria's capital, which killed 24 people and  left another 116 wounded.

 
 
 
 
 
 11/05/2011 08:25:00 AM
11/05/2011 08:25:00 AM
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