According to Guardian, the suspected bomber, a fairly old woman, who was said to have been confronted first by the hospital’s security guards, was arrested after it was discovered that she hid an Improvised Explosive Device (IED) in a food flask she was carrying.
She disguised
as a relation of a female patient who had come to present food at the maternity
ward. But when she was stopped at the gate to open the two food flasks she was
carrying before she could be allowed to proceed to the ward, she refused to
open one of the flasks.
One of the
hospital’s security guards narrated the story to journalists:
“When she was asked to open the other flask,
she refused, swearing that she will not open it. Our security guards have to
call the soldiers at a military post to ascertain whether or not the flask
contains any explosive. Three minutes after, the bomb detector beeped for some
seconds, indicating the presence of an explosive device, and the old woman was
immediately whisked way by the military personnel to an unknown destination for
further interrogation and investigation.”
On the identity of the suspect, he said that
when the woman was asked about her place of residence, she responded that:
“I am an old woman from Chibok town, and I
wanted to deliver food to one of my relations admitted here in this hospital.”
Another
tragedy was averted in Jos on Thursday following the discovery of highly
explosive objects neatly tucked in sacks and positioned in-between a private
secondary school, Tin City College and Fatima Primary School,
The explosive
was discovered by a pupil of the primary school, who quickly alerted the school
authority, while the headmaster and other teachers dashed to the nearby Laranto
police station to intimate the police of the objects. The police who suspected
that the objects could be bomb, called in the state anti-bomb squad, which
arrived at the nick of time and cordoned off the area before it defused the
explosive.
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