Suicide The bodies of female suicide bombers evacuated from military outpost in Borno by NEMA officials | PR Nigeria
The bodies of female suicide bombers evacuated from military outpost in Borno by NEMA officials | PR Nigeria

Fourteen people have now died in the latest suicide bomb attack in northeast Nigeria, an official said Monday, calling for greater protection for those made homeless by Boko Haram.

Three bombers, all of them women, detonated their explosives near the sprawling Muna Garage camp on the outskirts of the Borno state capital, Maiduguri, on Sunday [October 22, 2017] evening.

The blasts came after warnings of a build-up of jihadist fighters outside the strategic city, which has been the epicentre in the eight years of Islamist violence.

Ahmed Satomi, from the Borno state emergency management agency, told AFP the death toll had risen since Sunday evening.

“So far, we have 14 people killed and 18 injured in the triple suicide bombings last night,” he said.

But he said the Muna Garage site, which in the last 18 months has developed from an informal settlement into a vast camp for internally displaced persons (IDPs), was “vulnerable”.

“So far this year we have recorded 13 suicide attacks in the area, including that of yesterday. I think we need to revise the security situation in the area,” he added.

“We need to employ modern surveillance strategies which will enable us to identify potential attackers before they strike”.

The Boko Haram conflict, which began in 2009, has so far killed at least 20,000 people and displaced more than 2.6 million.

There are currently about 1.7 million IDPs in Borno and the neighbouring states of Adamawa and Yobe staying in camps or with distant relatives or friends, according to UN figures.

Major concern

Unlike most of the formal IDP camps, Muna Garage is not enclosed within walls, with access strictly controlled by civilian militia forces or soldiers.

Instead, it lies on either side of the main road to Ngala, on the border with Cameroon, and near a bus station that attracts large crowds.

Access is possible from the road or the fields beyond the city limits.

Boko Haram, which has lost control of towns and villages that it occupied in 2014 and 2015, has increasingly used suicide bombers, particularly against civilian “soft” targets.

The last attack in and around Muna Garage was on September 8, when two women blew themselves up at a checkpoint.

The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs last Friday said such attacks against IDPs in camps “continue to be a major concern”.

On September 20, nine IDPs from the Rann camp, in northern Borno near the shores of Lake Chad, were killed as they tended their fields.

On September 8, at least seven people were killed when Boko Haram fighters fired a rocket-propelled grenade into the IDP camp in Ngala, which houses some 80,000 people.

A week earlier, 11 people had died when militants stormed a camp in Banki, on the border with Cameroon, to steal food.

Buhari Defeats Boko Haram?

Late December 2016, President Muhammadu Buhari declared victory over the Islamist terrorist group after Nigerian troops announced that they have recaptured Camp Zero in Sambisa forest, the base of the deadliest terrorist group in the world.

The Nigerian Army later presented the president with the flag belonging to the terrorist group in a “mission accomplished” ceremony.

Since the declaration a week ahead of Christmas Day 2016, Boko Haram has launched a number of deadly attacks in the North Eastern region of the country where the terrorists have murdered at least 50,000 since they began their campaign to establish an Islamic caliphate in the country.

Additional reports from Signal.

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