Five policemen, 32 others killed in Borno, Benue attacks

Inspector-General of Police, Mohammed Abubakar
Ten
persons were killed in Maiduguri, the Borno State capital on Tuesday,
when two suicide bombers rammed their cars into a police patrol vehicle.
Also, 27 people were reportedly killed on
Tuesday in Benue State after a brutal attack which took place in Agena
Village in Gwer-East Local Government Area of the state. The attack was
attributed to a suspected herdsmen’s militia group which had been linked
to a series of attacks in the state over the past two years.
Those killed in the Maiduguri incident
that happened at about 9am included five policemen, three civilians and
the two suicide bombers that drove two Volkswagen Golf cars that rammed
simultaneously into the police patrol Toyota Hilux van.
It was also learnt that many persons were
left with severe injuries in the incident that shook the entire town
and heightened security checks in the town.
It was gathered that after the incident
which happened at the outskirts of Maiduguri near Dalori Housing Estate,
soldiers of the 7 Division of the Nigerian Army with a combined team of
mobile policemen and youth vigilante group popularly called Civilian
JTF swung into action combing the area for some of the attackers
believed to still be at large.
The scene of the blasts was cordoned off
in order to prevent further attacks as vehicles moving to and from the
area were thoroughly searched.
The State Police Public Relations
Officer, DSP Gideon Jubrin, who confirmed the incident to journalists on
phone, revealed that the five policemen that lost their lives in the
attack were attached to the Federal Highway Patrol team.
He also revealed that three innocent civilians including the two suicide bombers died on the spot.
A member of the Civilian JTF, Ibrahim
Haruna, who spoke to journalists, revealed that he saw the mangled
bodies of the police officers immediately after the explosion.
He said, “The incident happened around
9am when we heard a loud bang and we mobilised to the scene where we
discovered that it was a suicide bomb attack on a police patrol vehicle.
I saw five bodies of policemen scattered all over the place.”
When our correspondent visited the scene
of the attack on Tuesday, a burnt Volkswagen car believed to be used by
the suicide bombers was seen with the bombers’ corpses.
Survivors and eyewitnesses in the Benue attacks told SaharaReporters
that the invaders launched the attack on the community around 5am, with
the sound of gunfire coming from their blazing guns waking many.
“Some of us even don’t know how we
escaped (with our lives) because nobody here knew where the shots were
coming from. We were just running in all directions (to get away,”) one
source had said.
At the Federal Medical Centre, Makurdi,
about 12 bodies were brought in by the police some hours after the
attacks. Sources said some of the bodies were discovered with fresh
bullet wounds, and assembled at the village.
The Benue State Police Command
spokesperson, Daniel Ezeala, confirmed the early morning attack on the
village, but insisted that the police saw only seven bodies.
The village remains tense, and for good
reason. For over two weeks, hardly a day has passed without an attack on
the natives in Benue by suspected herdsmen and their militia.
Meanwhile, the police in Kaduna State on
Tuesday foiled a plot to bomb the state capital by detonating a
suspected substance believed to be a high calibre Improvised Explosive
Device wrapped in a polythene bag and dropped by an okada rider (commercial cyclist) at the ever busy Sultan/Sir. Kashim Road in the metropolis.
The incident occurred just as the state
government through its Commissioner for Information and Chieftaincy
Affairs, Mr. Ben Bako, on Tuesday called on residents to be vigilant
and report suspicious movement to the security agents in the state.
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