KADUNA (AFP) – A suicide attacker drove a car bomb into a church on
Sunday, sparking fierce reprisals that saw a Christian mob burn a man
alive in day of a bloody of violence that left at least 10 people dead
and 145 wounded.
Christian youths took to the streets of the
northern city of Kaduna with machetes and sticks after the blast,
targeting those they believed to be Muslims as anger again boiled over
due to repeated church bombings in recent months.
Attackers beat a
motorcycle taxi driver near the church, then put his bike on top of him
before dousing him with petrol and setting him on fire, an AFP
correspondent who saw the violence said. Two other bloodied bodies
apparently killed by the mob were seen near the church.
A rescue official on condition of anonymity also spoke of the man being
burnt and said rescuers could not save him because the mob was too
violent.
The mob also attacked an ambulance in the ensuing violence, but there was no indication that rescuers were wounded.
“So
far we have eight dead and 145 injured from the church blast,” Musa
Ilallah, regional coordinator for the National Emergency Management
Agency, told AFP, noting that his death toll included the suspected
bomber.
The attacker rammed what residents said was an SUV into
St. Rita church, shaking the Malali neighbourhood of Kaduna, a city that
has suffered a wave of deadly violence blamed on Islamist extremist
group Boko Haram.
“All of a sudden it drove on high speed and
rammed into the church wall, forcing its way into the church premises,”
said witness Samuel Emmanuel.
“Initially I thought the driver had
lost control of the vehicle. Suddenly there was a huge explosion as the
car reached the church building. It was dust, fire and smoke all over.”
A
spokesman for Nigeria’s National Emergency Management Agency confirmed
the bomb attack and said rescuers had been rushed to the scene.
“A
number of casualties evacuated to hospitals,” said Yushau Shuaib. The
incident was suspected to be triggered by a suicide bomber in a car.”
An
AFP correspondent said mobs were yelling “why the church?” and some
were carrying weapons, including machetes. Local elders were seeking to
restore calm.
Residents had earlier spoken of clashes having broken out between Christian and Muslim residents.
The attack came after Friday’s Muslim Eid al-Adha holiday, but it was not clear if there was any link.
In
June, Boko Haram claimed responsibility for three suicide attacks on
churches in Kaduna state, where the city of Kaduna is located, which led
to deadly rioting. Dozens of people were killed in the violence.
Boko
Haram’s insurgency in northern and central Nigeria has led to more than
2,800 deaths since 2009. While Muslims have often been its victims, it
has in recent months also specifically targeted churches.
President
Goodluck Jonathan has said the group is seeking to incite a religious
crisis in Africa’s most populous nation and largest oil producer,
roughly divided between a mainly Muslim north and predominately
Christian south.
Kaduna is a large mainly Muslim city in Nigeria’s north and includes a sizeable Christian population.
Nigerians
have grown increasingly frustrated with security forces’ inability to
stop Boko Haram attacks, and there have been warnings of more reprisals
if the violence continued.
Some Evangelical church leaders in
Nigeria have said Christians may be forced to defend themselves if
something is not done to address the unrest.
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