According to reports, many people are feared to have lost their lives in the attack and others sustained injuries as witnesses of the explosion stated that it occurred when students of the affected school gathered for the routine morning assembly.
It was gathered that the
assembly holds at 8am, Monday to Friday.
Another source informed
that the attack was carried out by a student suicide bomber.
Speaking with AFP reporter,
a teacher from the school said: “The students had gathered for the morning
assembly when something exploded in their midst with a thunderous sound at
exactly 7:50 am (0650 GMT).
“The explosion has affected
many students but I can’t say how many because we are now evacuating the
victims to the hospital which is just 100 metres (yards) away.”
A medic at the Potiskum
General Hospital where the victims were taken said that scores of students had
been admitted.
“We are still receiving
casualties from the school which is a stone’s throw from here,” the medic said.
“Our priority now is to
save the injured, so we have not started a headcount of the victims.”
A local resident, Adamu
Alkassim, said there was confusion in and around the school but the scene was a
mass of abandoned footwear and blood.
Confirming the attack to
Premium Times, the spokesperson of the Yobe State Command of the Nigeria
Police, Nansak Chegwam, declined to comment on the incident, saying the
military is in charge of operations at the scene of the incident.
Also, a military source
told Sahara Reporters that over 30 bodies of students and teachers lay at the
scene of the incident with many others sustaining injuries.
It was also gathered that
other schools in the area have been closed down.
Though no one has claimed
responsibility for the attack, it is believed it was carried attack ny the
Islamist group Boko Haram.
This is because the
terrorist sect has severally claimed responsibility for such attacks in the
area.
In February, gunmen killed
at least 40 students when they opened fire on students and threw explosives
into the dormitory of a government boarding school in Buni Yadi, also in Yobe
state.
In July last year 42
students were killed when Boko Haram gunmen attacked dormitories with guns and
explosives in a government boarding school in the village of Mamudo, near
Potiskum.
Potiskum, the commercial
hub of Yobe state, has been repeatedly targeted by deadly attacks blamed on
Boko Haram.
Yobe is one of three north-eastern
states that have been under a state of emergency since May last year to try to
quell the bloody insurgency.
But violence has continued
unabated and Boko Haram has seized at least two dozen towns and villages in
recent months, raising fears of the government’s ability to control the region.

Nigeria, where are thou?
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