An AFP tally puts the death
toll at more than 1,320 in Nigeria alone since Muhammadu Buhari became
president on May 29 2015.
Amnesty International said
last month that the Boko Haram conflict had killed at least 1,600 people since
the start of June in Nigeria, Niger, Chad and Cameroon and called for more
protection for civilians.
Boko Haram claimed
responsibility for three suicide attacks in the satellite towns of Kuje and
Nyanya outside Nigeria’s capital Abuja on October 2, which killed a total of 18
people and injured 41.
On Tuesday, Nigeria’s most
senior police officer, Inspector General of Police Solomon Arase, said two
people had been arrested on suspicion of masterminding the blasts.
The suspects’ identities
were not disclosed but Arase said in a statement the arrests had “foiled
another attempt… to undertake further attacks in the FCT (Federal Capital
Territory)”.
Items recovered from the
suspects included 12 “prepared and primed” home-made explosives concealed in
soft drink cans, 28 electronic detonator parts and a “large quantity” of
bomb-making equipment, he added.
Nigeria’s military has
claimed a series of successes in recent months and has characterised the
upsurge in attacks on civilian targets as desperation on the part of the
Islamic State group-alled militants.
Attacks have also continued
across the border. At the weekend, 41 people were killed and another 48 injured
in triple explosions in Baga Sola, on the Chadian side of Lake Chad, where
Nigeria meets Niger, Chad and Cameroon.
One targeted a fish market
and two a refugee camp for those displaced by the violence.
Dis pple cannot be smarter than d government.
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