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This photo taken on September 1,2015 shows Nigeria's vice president Yemi
Osinbajo attending the inauguration ceremony for the president of
African Development Bank. Mr Osinbajo, who is also the acting president
has issued a directive to the military to scale-up their activities in
Borno State following a terror attack Tuesday, which killed 28 people.
PHOTO | ISSOUF SANOGO | AFP
KANO
Three
women suicide bombers blew themselves up at the entrance to a camp for
displaced people in northeast Nigeria on Tuesday, killing 28 people and
wounding 82, local sources said.
FEMALE BOMBERS
The
attack — the latest in a string of assaults in the troubled region —
took place in the town of Mandarari, 25 kilometres (15 miles) from
Maiduguri, the capital of Borno State, said Baba Kura, a member of a
vigilante force set up to fight jihadists.
"Three
female bombers triggered their explosive outside the IDP (Internally
Displaced Persons) camp... killing 28 people and wounding 82 others," Mr
Kura said, adding that the first assailant blew herself up, triggering
panic.
"People were trying to close
their shops when two other female bombers triggered their explosives,
causing most of the casualties," he said.
Confirming
the attack, Ibrahim Liman, the head of a local anti-jihadist militia
force, said more than 80 injured people had been taken to Maiduguri
Hospital.
A source at the hospital said a "huge number" of patients had arrived.
BOKO HARAM
Northeast Nigeria is a hotbed of activity by the Boko Haram jihadist group, involving shootings, bombings and kidnappings.
It
launched an insurgency in 2009 that has killed about 20,000 people and
displaced around 2.6 million others, creating one of the world's biggest
humanitarian crises.
Nearly two million are suffering from acute malnutrition, according to UN figures.
After
being elected to power in 2015, Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari
made tackling the insurgency a priority, winning back swathes of
territory and declaring that Boko Haram is "technically defeated".
But
this year has seen a surge in attacks, including an audacious assault
on an oil exploration team that killed 69 people in Borno in July,
raising fears that Boko Haram is regaining strength.
CONTROL
That
attack prompted Vice President Yemi Osinbajo — standing in for
President Buhari who is on indefinite sick leave — to tell the military
to step up its response.
Mr Osinbajo
issued "fresh directives... to immediately scale-up their efforts and
activities in Borno State... to maintain a strong, effective control of
the situation", his spokesman Laolu Akandehe said.
In
August, however, 72 people have been killed in northeastern Nigeria,
including 31 fishermen on islands in Lake Chad, according to an
unofficial toll compiled from news reports.
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