A bombing
at a bus station in Gombe city killed at least 20 people today, the latest
violence in the region repeatedly targeted by Boko Haram, the Red Cross said.
As the
country is set to hold a general election on February 14, but relentless
bloodshed has raised security concerns ahead of the poll, with some warning
that voting may be impossible in large parts of the northeast.
“There
was an explosion at the Dukku motor park. The Red Cross mobilised with 20 body
bags and they have all been exhausted,” said Abubakar Yakubu Gombe, area
secretary for the Red Cross.
“We are
still looking for more bodies among the carnage,” he told AFP, adding that another
18 people with “serious” injuries had been taken to hospital.
The bomb
was planted near a bus that was filling up with passengers, said Mato Yakubu of
the National Orientation Agency, a government body responsible for the media.
He said
the blast occurred at 10:50 am (0950 GMT) at the station on the outskirts of
Gombe city, capital of Gombe state.
The city
was hit by a triple bombing blamed on the Islamists on October 31.
The state
shares a border with Borno and Yobe, two of the states worst affected by Boko
Haram’s five-year insurgency which has cost more than 13,000 lives.
The
Islamists have claimed a number of attacks at bus stations, often targeting
people who are heading to Nigeria’s mainly Christian south.
Witness
Awwalu Lame said a mob formed at the station shortly after the blast went off,
with locals throwing stones at the security services.
Anger has
risen across northern Nigeria following complaints that the security services
have repeatedly failed to contain the violence.
While
experts agree that isolated bombings are extremely difficult to stop, the
broader military response to the extremist uprising has been widely criticised.
President
Goodluck Jonathan, who is running for a second term, has on several occasions
claimed that Boko Haram’s defeat was imminent, even as the violence has
escalated.
The
insurgency has forced more than 1.5 million people from their homes, straining
resources in the embattled northeast, as communities struggle to care for those
displaced.
Underscoring
the severity of the crisis, 185 people, mostly women and children, were
kidnapped on December 14 from the town of Gumsuri in Borno.
The
attack recalled the kidnapping of more than 200 schoolgirls from a school in
the town of Chibok in April, a mass abduction that Jonathan vowed would not
happen again.
The
president’s opponent in February polls, ex-military dictator Muhammadu Buhari
from the mainly Muslim north, is seen by some as better placed to contain the
Boko Haram threat, but experts say he may struggle to unseat an incumbent with
the backing of a wealthy ruling party.
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