Zero casualty in Abuja blast
No casualties were reported in the explosion late Friday at a nightclub in Abuja, Nigeria’s capital.
However, the windows in the nightclub, a bank and a barber shop were shattered and a number of cars were damaged.
The blast went off outside the club, Kryxtal Lounge, moments after Nigeria’s national security adviser and defence minister were sacked amid fears over spiralling violence in the country’s north.
“No human casualty,” affirmed Yushau Shuaib, spokesman for the National Emergency Management Agency, said.
“The explosives were suspected to have been planted on a tree opposite Kryxtal Lounge.”
National Emergency Agency, NEMA has confirmed that the blast was from an improvised explosive device.
In a press release this morning by Yushau Shuaib, it spokesperson, NEMA also said no one was hurt when the bomb went off.
About six luxury cars and some building located around the scene of the blast were however not spared by the blast. The blast, which led to commotion around the area immediatelt attracted attention of Police and military officers who immediately cordoned off the scene.
It is not yet clear how the bomb got to the area. While some reports stated that it was thrown from a moving car, others said it was planted under a tree.Others insisted that the explosive device was planted inside the booth of a car. The security agencies who searched the scene for evidence of the explosive device took away some cars from the scene of the explosion.There was commotion earlier in the day in the Wuse Zone 5 area of the city over an abandoned bag suspected to contain explosive devices. The discovery led to hurried evacuation of offices around the area. But it was later discovered that the bag cotained harmless materials after men of the Police Anti Bomb Unit were called in.
Nigeria has been hit by scores of bombings blamed on Islamist group Boko Haram, including some in and around Abuja.
A suicide bomb attack on UN headquarters in Abuja in August killed at least 25 people, while another at the Abuja office of one of the country’s most prominent newspapers left four dead.
Prominent areas of the capital, including major hotels, have long been under tight security over fears of more violence.
Nigeria has been grappling with Boko Haram’s insurgency for months, but criticism of President Goodluck Jonathan sharply intensified this week after three suicide bombings at churches sparked reprisals from Christian mobs who burnt mosques and killed dozens of Muslims.
There have been growing warnings that there could be more cases of residents taking the law into their own hands if something is not done to halt the Boko Haram attacks.
Nigeria, Africa’s most populous nation and largest oil producer, is roughly divided between a mainly Muslim north and predominately Christian south.
Jonathan met with his security team on Friday after he returned from a UN environmental summit in Brazil. His decision to leave Nigeria on Tuesday for the summit as fresh riots broke out had also drawn heavy criticism.
After the meeting, Jonathan’s spokesman announced the national security adviser and defence minister had been fired.
The new security adviser is to be Sambo Dasuki, a retired colonel, prominent northerner and cousin to the Sultan of Sokoto, Nigeria’s highest Muslim spiritual figure.
Dasuki was also implicated in a 1995 coup attempt against the government of former dictator Sani Abacha and went into exile in the United States at the time.
It was not yet clear who would replace defence minister Bello Mohammed.
The fired national security adviser, Owoye Azazi, is a political ally of Jonathan’s, with both men from Bayelsa state in the oil-producing south.
Azazi faced suspicion in the north, particularly after comments he made in April which many took as indicating that the violence was politically linked.
Several days of unrest in parts of northern Nigeria have left at least 106 people dead.
The violence started Sunday in Kaduna state, with suicide attacks at three churches which killed at least 16 people and triggered reprisals from Christian mobs, who burned mosques and killed dozens of Muslims.
More rioting broke out in Kaduna later in the week, while on Monday and Tuesday, shootouts between security forces and suspected Islamists in the northeastern city of Damaturu left at least 40 people dead.
The initial suicide bombings were claimed by Boko Haram, whose insurgency concentrated in the north has killed hundreds.
Criticism has mounted over the government’s response to the violence, with few public indications of what strategies are being employed beyond heavy-handed military raids to stop the onslaught of attacks.
Boko Haram initially said it was fighting for the creation of an Islamic state, but its demands have since repeatedly shifted. It is believed to have a number of factions, including a main Islamist wing.
Many say deep poverty and frustration in the north have been main factors in creating the insurgency.
The United States on Thursday said it had designated the head of the main branch of Boko Haram, Abubakar Shekau, a “global terrorist” along with two others tied to both Boko Haram and Al-Qaeda’s north African branch.
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