KANO (AFP) – Investigators on Monday
combed the scene of a suicide car bomb attack that killed four in the north
Nigerian city of Kano, as police said they had foiled a second blast.
Authorities said it was too early to
say who was behind the violence but observers suggested a link to local
politics rather than Boko Haram, the Islamist insurgents terrorising north
Nigeria who are holding more than 200 schoolgirls captive.
The scene of Sunday’s blast in the
mainly Christian district of Sabon Gari was cordoned off, with armed police and
soldiers on guard and allowing only local residents back home.
Police meanwhile said officers had
averted another car bomb attack in the city after stopping a car packed with
material for a home-made bomb.
“Kano police operatives, acting on
intelligence, tracked and recovered a Mitsubishi station wagon car… loaded with
assorted gas cylinders, one container of fuel and other electrical components
of improvised explosive devices,” a statement read.
“The vehicle was recovered at Tafawa
Balewa Street, (in the) Nasarawa area of Kano state, and has since been
rendered safe by police bomb disposal experts.
“Meanwhile, security agencies in
Kano have commenced (an) investigation into both the aborted blast as well as
last night’s bomb incident.”
Sunday’s attack happened at about
10:00 pm (2100 GMT) in the Middle Road area of the neighbourhood on Sunday,
when the busy area was packed with revellers at its many bars and restaurants.
Windows on the two-storey buildings
lining the road were smashed and the burnt-out remains of five cars, plus the
attackers’ vehicle, were left on the roadside.
Kano police commissioner Adelere
Shinaba told reporters that it was soon early to say who was responsible for the
attack, which is the second time in less than a year that Sabon Giri has been
targeted.
Three men and a young girl aged 12
were killed in the blast, he added. Seven others were injured.
- Previous target -
Last July, a series of explosions
rocked the Sabon Gari area, killing 12 with outdoor bars the apparent target.
The military at the time blamed Boko Haram Islamists for carrying out the
bombings.
The extremists have in the past
inflicted heavy violence on Kano, which is Nigeria’s second-biggest city and a
commercial hub for the whole of the Muslim-majority north.
But some observers were quick to
make a link between the blast and local government elections held in Kano on
Saturday, at which the main opposition All Progressives Congress (APC) won all
44 seats.
The last local elections were held
seven years ago and the announcement of the results triggered widespread
violence. Security had been tight in the city in the run-up to the latest poll.
Northern Nigeria has been hit by
five years of increasingly bloody attacks at the hands of Boko Haram and a
mounting civilian death toll.
On Saturday, President Goodluck
Jonathan and his counterparts from Benin, Niger, Chad and Cameroon vowed to
step up cooperation to target the group seen as a threat to regional stability.
On the eve of the summit, suspected
militant fighters kidnapped 10 Chinese construction workers from northern
Cameroon.
The authorities in Yaounde said it
was likely that they had been taken back across the border into Nigeria.
The United States, which has branded
Boko Haram an international terrorist group, said UN sanctions could be imposed
on it.
An international search is on
involving the United States, Britain, France and Israel to help find 223
schoolgirls still missing after they were kidnapped in Chibok, northeast Borno
state, on April 14.
Jonathan, under pressure because of
his handling of the affair, has ruled out negotiations for their release, after
Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau indicated they may be freed in a prisoner
exchange.
Courtesy Vanguard
Police Probe Kano Blast, Foil New Attack This Afternoon
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