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Jos bombing: NEMA, Police disagree on death toll

In the file: Rescuers put out fire in Jos bomb blast

The Nigerian police and the National Emergency Management Agency NEMA are locked in conflict over the number of the dead in the twin bombing of a market in Jos, capital of Plateau state.

While NEMA said 118 people were killed and entire buildings brought down in the blasts Tuesday, the police insisted that 46 people died.

The co-ordinator of the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), Mohammed Abdulsalam, said buildings collapsed because of the intensity of the blasts in the New Abuja Market area, causing raging fires.

Jos bombing: rescuers put out fire
Jos bombing: rescuers put out fire

“More bodies may be in the debris,” he told AFP, adding: “The exact figure of the dead bodies recovered as at now is 118… 56 people were injured.”

The police disputed the NEMA figure, however, and maintained that 46 were killed and 45 injured.

“We are saying 46,” said state police commissioner Chris Olakpe. “That’s the number we have in the morgues. But we are not ruling out more bodies.”

The bombing of the Jos Terminus market was the latest affront to President Goodluck Jonathan’s internationally-backed security crackdown.

Jonathan swiftly condemned the attack calling it a “tragic assault on human freedom” and condemning the perpetrators as “cruel and evil”.

But the deadly strike and a suicide car bomb attack that killed four in the northern city of Kano on Sunday, will raise fresh questions about the government’s grip on the country’s security.

Jonathan has already faced calls to quit for failing to ensure the safety of Nigerians and their property as well as come under criticism for his lacklustre response to the kidnapping of more than 200 schoolgirls by Boko Haram militants.

An international team, including specialists from the United States, Britain, France and Israel are involved in the hunt for the 223 teenagers, who were abducted in the remote northeastern town of Chibok on April 14.

– Co-ordinated attack –

The military said improvised explosive devices were hidden in a truck and a minibus. The second went off about 20 minutes after the first, as emergency service workers tended to the victims.

Most of the victims were women, added Pam Ayuba, spokesman for the state governor, Jonah Jang.

Plateau, of which Jos is the capital, falls in Nigeria’s so-called Middle Belt, where the mainly Christian south meets the Muslim-majority north.

The state and its religiously divided capital have seen deadly sectarian clashes in the past as well as attacks from Boko Haram extremists, who have been waging an increasingly deadly insurgency in the north since 2009.

There was no immediate indication of who was responsible for the latest attacks, although the police in Kano said they had arrested two men in connection with Sunday’s bombing, without giving more details.

Nigeria is under the spotlight as never before over its response to Boko Haram, given the global attention on the plight of the missing girls.

On the day of the mass abduction, the militants launched a car bomb attack on a bus station in a suburb of the capital Abuja which killed 75 and are suspected of a copy-cat attack in the same location on May 1 which left 19 dead.

Nigeria has concentrated on a mainly military response to Boko Haram in the northeast and on Tuesday, parliament approved a further six-month extension to a state of emergency in the states of Borno, Yobe and Adamawa.

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