Kaduna - Multiple
suicide attacks on churches in northern Nigeria and subsequent rioting by
Christian youths targeting Muslims killed at least 36 people on Sunday,
officials said. Bomb blasts struck three churches in the northern Kaduna state
in the space of an hour, the latest in a string of Sunday attacks that has
threatened to ignite wider sectarian strife across the divided country. There
was no immediate claim of responsibility for the bloodshed but the attacks were
likely to be blamed on Boko Haram, an extremist group bent on creating an
Islamic state and responsible for scores of recent bombings.
Officials put the
state - which last year saw sectarian violence that left more than 600 people
dead - under curfew for 24 hours "to assess the situation", banning
Kaduna's seven million inhabitants from leaving their homes for a full day.
Suicide bombers
attacked two churches in the city of Zaria and one in Kaduna City, killing at
least 16 people, national police spokesperson Frank Mba said in a statement.
Bodies ‘burnt
beyond recognition’
After news of the
blasts spread, Christian youths took to the main motorway that leads to the
capital Abuja, attacking motorists who looked Muslim. Christian mobs carrying
machetes and clubs were also prowling the streets of Kaduna city, the Red Cross
said. "Aid workers accompanied by armed policemen have been combing the
streets in the southern parts of the city picking dead bodies from reprisal
attacks. So far we have recovered over 20 bodies," said a Red Cross official
who requested anonymity.
Most were
"burned to death beyond recognition," he added. An AFP reporter said
he saw the bodies of 10 people killed by rioters at a morgue. More than 100
people were injured in the day of violence, according to the National Emergency
Management Agency.
The first blast
struck ECWA Goodnews Church in the Wusasa area of Zaria city at 08:35. The
second explosion went off 10 minutes later at the Christ the King Catholic church
in Zaria's Sabongari area, a police statement said.
‘Momentary
breakdown of law and order’
The third blast
hit the Shalom Church in Kaduna city at 09:30, where a worshipper said he saw a
bomber drive an explosives packed car into the church building. "Right
away the car exploded and killed a soldier and two private security guards
guarding the church," Joseph Emmanuel told us.
Emergency
officials had also reported attacks on churches in Nassarawa and Barnawa in the
south of the same state but police did not confirm them and the targets of the
blasts remained unclear.
The violent
response by Christian youth mobs that followed the attacks was termed "a
momentary breakdown of law and order," in the police statement.
The police chief
urged "criminal elements who have been carrying out campaigns of violence
on innocent Nigerians and institutions to desist forthwith," in the
statement issued from Abuja.
He also said a
massive deployment of forces had been ordered across "every nook and
cranny of the state".
Sectarian violence
Sectarian violence
One Kaduna
resident said it was not safe to travel. "I cancelled my trip to Abuja
because of the huge number of rioters that have taken over the roads," the
man told us. The latest violence targeting Christians in Nigeria, Africa's most
populous nation and top oil producer, was also condemned by the Vatican.
Brutal sectarian violence gripped Kaduna state following elections last year, during which President Goodluck Jonathan, a southern Christian, won a fresh four-year term. At least 180 were killed in Kaduna city and Zaria, while more than 500 people were slaughtered across several towns in the mainly Christian southern part of the state, according to Human Rights Watch. Most of the dead were Muslims. The latest church blasts resembled those previously claimed by Boko Haram, responsible for more than 1 000 deaths since mid-2009.
Brutal sectarian violence gripped Kaduna state following elections last year, during which President Goodluck Jonathan, a southern Christian, won a fresh four-year term. At least 180 were killed in Kaduna city and Zaria, while more than 500 people were slaughtered across several towns in the mainly Christian southern part of the state, according to Human Rights Watch. Most of the dead were Muslims. The latest church blasts resembled those previously claimed by Boko Haram, responsible for more than 1 000 deaths since mid-2009.
