Boko Haram: ‘Why we attacked the churches’
A purported spokesman for Boko Haram has claimed responsibility for Sunday’s attacks and threatened further violence.
“We are responsible for the suicide attack on a church in Jos and also another attack on another church in Biu,” the spokesman calling himself Abul Qaqa told reporters in the northeastern city of Maiduguri in a phone conference.
“We launched these attacks to prove the Nigerian security wrong and to debunk their claim that we have been weakened by the military crackdown,” he said, speaking in the Hausa language common throughout Nigeria’s north.
“The Nigerian state and Christians are our enemies and we will be launching attacks on the Nigerian state and its security apparatus as well as churches until we achieve our goal of establishing an Islamic state in place of the secular state.”
The attacks took place at evangelical churches in the central city of Jos and the northeastern town of Biu, both of which have been hit before by violence blamed on Boko Haram.
“The suicide bomber did not drive into the church before the explosion. He was in front of it,” police spokesman Abuh Emmanuel said of the Jos attack. “The church building collapsed entirely due to the intensity of the bombing.”
Local government spokesman Pam Ayuba told AFP that two people plus the bomber died and 41 were wounded.
A reporter at the scene said angry Christian youths assaulted local Muslims after the bombing.
The second attack killed at least one person and wounded several when gunmen opened fire during a service in Biu, Samson Bukar, the local Christian Association of Nigeria chairman, told AFP.
“One female worshipper was killed while several others were wounded, two of them critically. The gunmen escaped after the attack,” Bukar said.
Italy’s International Cooperation Minister Andrea Riccardi condemned the attack and called for international action to stop Boko Haram.
“Christian blood has again been spilt in Nigeria according to a now clear plan of ethnic and religious cleansing,” said Riccardi, who is also the founder of a Catholic charity active in Africa.
“The international community can no longer look on at this massacre of innocent people without intervening.”
Boko Haram’s attacks have grown increasingly sophisticated and have begun affecting a wider area, spreading from their base in the northeast across the wider north and down to the capital Abuja, in the centre of the country.
It claimed responsibility for a suicide bombing of UN headquarters in Abuja in August that killed at least 25 people and a suicide attack on the Abuja office of one of the country’s most prominent newspapers.
Its deadliest attack yet occurred in the northern city of Kano in January, when at least 185 people died in coordinated bombings and shootings.
Boko Haram also claimed a bomb attack at a church near the capital on Christmas day that killed at least 44 people.
Jos lies on the fault line between the Muslim-majority north and the Christian-dominated south.
In addition to the recent Boko Haram violence, repeated cycles of clashes and reprisal attacks in and around Jos have left several thousand people dead in recent years.
Biu is located in the northeastern state of Borno, which has been Boko Haram’s base.
The group’s mosque and headquarters were located in the Borno state capital of Maiduguri until a 2009 military assault destroyed them, an operation that left some 800 people dead.
Heavy-handed military crackdowns have so far failed to stop the group. Members are believed to have received training in northern Mali from Al-Qaeda’s north African branch.
An attempt at dialogue between the government and Boko Haram in March collapsed when a mediator quit and a spokesman for what is seen as the group’s main faction said they could not trust the government
Monday, June 11, 2012
Boko Haram: ‘Why we attacked the churches’
Monday, June 11, 2012
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