The death toll from a school massacre in Yobe by suspected Boko Haram
Islamists on Tuesday has risen to 43, a hospital source in the troubled
northeastern Yobe state said.
“Ambulances have been bringing in bodies from Federal Government
College in (the town of Buni Yadi,” a senior medical source at the Sani
Abacha Specialist Hospital in Yobe’s capital Damaturu told AFP.
“So far 43 bodies have been brought and are lying at the morgue,” he
said, requesting anonymity as he was not authorised to discuss death
tolls.
Yobe’s police chief Sanusi Rufai told AFP that 29 people were killed
but it was not immediately clear if all of the dead were students.
Rufai said he was en route to Buni Yadi with Yobe’s covernor Ibrahim Geidam to assess the extent of the damage.
Yobe is one of three northeastern states which was placed under
emergency rule in May last year when the military launced a massive
operation to crush the Boko Haram uprising.
At least 40 students were killed in September at an agriculture
training college in Yobe after Boko Haram gunmen stormed a series of
dorms in the middle of the night and sprayed gunfire on sleeping
students.
More than 1,000 people have been killed in the northeast since the
emergency measures were imposed, despite the enhanced military presence.
Boko Haram, declared a terrorist organisation by Nigeria and the
United States, has said it is fighting to create an Islamic state in
Nigeria’s mainly Muslim north.
Geidam and the governor of neighbouring Borno state, Kashim Shettima,
have fiercely criticised the military’s record in combatting Boko
Haram, insisting that more resources were needed to defeat the
emboldened and increasingly well-armed insurgents.
In a video sent to AFP last week, Boko Haram’s purported leader,
Abubakar Shekau, said he would continue his relentless campaign of
violence on anyone who supports democracy or so-called Western values.
Shekau, declared a global terrorist by the United States, also
threated to widen the insurgency outside the group’s northeastern
stronghold with attacks in the oil-producing, southern Niger Delta
region.
Nigeria is Africa’s top oil producer and an Islamist attack in the
country’s key economic region would pile further pressure on President
Goodluck Jonathan, who has faced scathing criticism over his handling of
the Boko Haram crisis. [AFP]
No comments:
Post a Comment