Tag: Bomb

  • Bomb kills 5 during football match

    A bomb killed five spectators at a football match in southern Somalia, police and a lawmaker said on Friday, the first time an explosion has targeted a stadium.

    The blast went off in the port town of Barawe, in the Lower Shabelle region, when residents were watching a football match on Thursday afternoon, police said, adding that al Qaeda-linked al Shabaab could be behind the attack.

    Police said it appeared to have been detonated by remote control.

    “The bomb killed five people and injured a dozen others in the football field.

    “All the casualties were from the onlookers,” Mahad Dhoore, a lawmaker for South West state told Reuters.

    Police officer Mohamed Aden said al Shabaab group was suspected of being behind the attack and put the number of dead at four and wounded at 12.

    “We believe al Shabaab was behind (it) and that the target was officials who were not seated there at the time of the match.

    “The bomb looked like a remotely controlled one that was planted there,” Aden told Reuters from Barawe.

    Al Shabaab are fighting to topple Somalia’s Western-backed central government and establish their own rule based on their strict interpretation of Islamic law.

    The group frequently carries out bombings and gun attacks in the capital Mogadishu and other parts of Somalia.

    “Al Shabaab carried out an explosion that killed teenagers who were just playing football in Barawe town.

    “Al Shabaab is the only enemy we have,” President Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed said during a farewell party for Somalia’s outgoing parliament speaker.

  • Police arrest one as bomb explodes at New York’s Port Authority

    There are reports of a possible terror attack in New York City, after an explosion was felt Monday morning in a Subway station near Times Square.

    Commuters said they felt a blast in the Subway tunnels underneath the Port Authority Bus Terminal around 6:30am. The bus terminal is a major transit hub for people commuting into the city by bus from New Jersey, and is located just a block from Times Square.

    Police reportedly have one man in custody, who had an explosive device on him; and that they are investigating the possibility of it being a terror attack.

    Reports say that it appears the Subway was not the intended target of the pipe bomb, and that it may have gone off prematurely.

    So far, the only reports of injuries are to the suspect himself. His identity has not been released.

    It’s unclear if there have been any more victims, but there are dozens of ambulances in the area.

    Law enforcement agencies have responded to the scene and have set up a perimeter around the area.

    The New York Police Department has cleared the subway lines beneath the Port Authority bus station and are telling commuters to stay away from the area.

    The blast happened less than a week after President Trump sparked violence in the Middle East by officially recognizing Jerusalem as Israel’s capital city.

    Palestinians leaders vowed ‘three days of rage’ to protest the controversial decision.

    White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders tweeted Monday morning that the president had been briefed on the situation.

     

    (Mail)

  • Death toll from Somalia bomb attacks rises to 300 – Official

    Authorities on Monday confirmed that 300 people died in twin bomb explosions in Mogadishu, as locals packed hospitals in search of friends and relatives caught up in Somalia’s deadliest attack in a decade.

    Abdikadir Abdirahman, director city ambulance service, told Reuters on Monday that the death toll has steadily risen since Saturday, when the blasts, for which no organisation had claimed responsibility by Monday morning, struck at two busy junctions in the heart of the city.

    “We have confirmed 300 people died in the blast. The death toll will still be higher because some people are still missing.”

    Aden Nur, a doctor at the city’s Madina hospital, said they had recorded 258 deaths while Ahmed Ali, a nurse at the nearby Osman Fiqi hospital, told Reuters five bodies had been sent there.

    Nur said 160 of the bodies could not be recognised. “(They) were buried by the government yesterday. The others were buried by their relatives.

    “Over a hundred injured were also brought here,” he told Reuters at the hospital.

    Officials said some of the injured were being evacuated by air to Turkey for treatment.

    Locals visiting their injured relatives or collecting their bodies filled every available space in Madina hospital.

    “My last time to speak with my brother was some minutes before the blast occurred.

    “By then he told me, he was on the way to meet and was passing at K5,” Halima Nur, a local mother, told Reuters, referring to one of the junctions that was struck.

    “I am afraid he was among the unrecognised charred bodies that were buried yesterday. I have no hope of getting him alive or dead. But I cannot go home.”

    Saturday bomb attacks were the deadliest since Islamist militant group al Shabaab began an insurgency in 2007.

    Neither it nor any other group had claimed responsibility, but al Shabaab, which is allied to al Qaeda, stages regular attacks in the capital and other parts of the country.

    The group is waging an insurgency against Somalia’s UN-backed government and its African Union allies in a bid to impose its own strict interpretation of Islam.

    The militants were driven out of Mogadishu in 2011 and have been steadily losing territory since then to the combined forces of AU peacekeepers and Somali security forces.

    Al Shabaab retains the capacity to mount large, complex bomb attacks.

    Over the past three years, the number of civilians killed by insurgent bombings has steadily climbed as al Shabaab increases the size of its bombs.

    Nur said that some of those seriously injured in Saturday’s bombing were moved by ambulance to the airport on Monday morning to be flown to Turkey for further treatment.

    Workers unloaded boxes of medicine and other medical supplies from a Turkish military plane parked on the tarmac, while Turkish medical teams attended to the cases of injuries moved from the hospital for evacuation.

     

    (Reuters/NAN)

  • 12 dead, 24 injured in Baghdad car bomb

    A car explosion hit a market in the eastern part of the Iraqi capital, leaving at least 12 people killed and 24 injured, media reported on Monday.

    The blast occurred at the Jamila market in Baghdad’s district of Sadr City, the Xinhua news agency reported, citing a source in the Iraqi Interior Ministry.

    Many nearby shops and stalls were reportedly destroyed by the explosion. Iraqi security forces cordoned off the area near the site.

    No terror group has claimed responsibility for the attack yet.

    The attack was committed a day after two car bombs exploded in southern Baghdad, leaving five people killed and six others injured.

    Iraq has been facing the period of instability since the 2003 invasion of the U.S.-led coalition that resulted in the overthrow of then-President Saddam Hussein.

    The new wave of violence erupted in Iraq after the 2014 offensive of the Islamic State (IS, outlawed in Russia) terror group, which seized large territories in northern and western parts of the country.

    The Iraqi government troops managed to recapture most territories, including the second biggest city of Mosul.

  • Bomb scare causes panic on Saudi airliner

    Bomb scare causes panic on Saudi airliner

    Airport officials say an apparently mentally unstable man caused panic among passengers on a airliner heading for Cairo from Jeddah in Saudi Arabia when he threatened to blow up the aircraft.

    Airport sources said that the 61-year-old man, a retired textile worker from Egypt, was subdued by security staff on the plane, operated by Saudi airline Flynas, and arrested when it landed in the Egyptian capital.

    The man told police he was not aware of what he had done, according to the sources.

    He was being questioned and was expected to be referred to a psychiatrist to determine his mental state.

    State-run newspaper Ahramgate said no weapons or explosives were found with him.

    Air security is a sensitive topic in Egypt.

    An Egyptair plane crashed in the Mediterranean last year, killing all 66 people on board in so far unexplained circumstances, while a Russian plane came down over Sinai in 2015, killing 224 in an attack claimed by Islamic State.

     

    NAN

     

  • How we accidentally bombed IDP camp in Rann – NAF

    The Chief of Air Staff, Air Marshal Sadique Abubakar, has explained that the Internally Displaced Persons Camp (IDP) camp in Rann, Borno was bombed due to “communication gap.”

    Abubakar, who stated this while speaking to journalists also confirmed that the committee set up to investigate the incident has submitted its report.

    The report has been submitted, but I would not let you into the findings of the report. This is because we are forwarding it to the Defence Headquarters and from there to the Ministry of Defence.

    But one thing I want to say is that it is a very tragic incident. It has happened and it is something that is associated with war.

    Even recently, some foreign powers also bombed friendly forces mistakenly. What is important to us is to pray for the families of the deceased and support them. And this is what we have been doing.

    Usually when a thing like this happens, you find out that there is a communication gap somewhere. It is left for us to find out: Why did that communication gap exist? What can we do to ensure that it does not come up again?,” Abubakar said.

    He vowed that anyone found culpable in the incident will not be spared.

    Abubakar added: “If there are very glaring cases of people who are negligent, we will not hesitate to be very decisive to deal with that situation.

    We have interacted with a number of Non-Governmental Organisations in that area. We have advised them that any time they are going for outreaches, they must give us a notice. We have suggested that they use the Red Cross insignia. This must be done so that anybody flying over will see the insignia and know that these are outreach gatherings and not Boko Haram.

    No matter what, we have always double-checked our intelligence and will ensure that we do so before deploying airplanes. We are working on that so we do not have this situation again.

    We have flown over 7,000 hours for over eight years and this is the first time we are having the Rann incident. I am not justifying the bombing. It was tragic, but war in itself is tragic.”

    TheNewsGuru.com reports that over 200 persons reportedly died in the accidental bombing of IDPs that occurred in January.

     

  • Suicide bomber kill self, vigilante in Borno

    Suicide bomber kill self, vigilante in Borno

    A suicide bomber and a local vigilante were killed during an attempt on a Maiduguri mosque on Monday morning, a security official has confirmed.

    Borno Police spokesman, Victor Isuzu, said a male suicide bomber carried out the attack at the Dalori area of the state capital.

    “Today at about 0522hrs, a male suicide bomber detonated Improvised Explosive Device (IED) strapped to his body near a mosque at Dalori Quarters situated along Maiduguri/ Konduga /Bama road.
    “The bomber killed himself and a local vigilante- the civilian JTF operative who tried to prevent him from getting close to the mosque where many faithful in the locality were observing their early morning prayers,” he said.

    20 people were killed at an attack in Buraburin area of Maiduguri In Dec, 28, 2016 while another four were killed two weeks ago at a Mosque in University of Maiduguri staff quarters.

    Isuzu said the area of the Monday attack had been secured and normal activities has resumed.

  • Never again to the bomb that missed our backyard

    Never again to the bomb that missed our backyard

    By Azu Ishiekwene

    In a week when Africa riveted on former President Yahya Jammeh’s tantrums, an event that could have shaken the continent to its core slipped below the radar.

    Or maybe we didn’t think it was sufficiently important. It emerged early in the week that the British Prime Minister, Theresa May, had knowingly concealed information about a failed missile test when she appeared in Parliament to ask for 40billion pounds to replace the Trident, the UK’s flagship missile defence system.

    The UK Guardian, which published the story, mentioned “West Africa,” the test target, by accident in its more than 800-word copy.

    Opposition parliamentarians were not necessarily mad that the prime minister had taken them for a ride, although that was part of the problem. They couldn’t understand how this secret had been concealed from them since June and why they had to find out through the backdoor that the missile, which was tested in Florida, US, backfired.

    For Africa, the problem was different. If the UK had actually fired the missile at West Africa, it could have landed in Accra, Abuja or Abidjan.

    It’s convenient to argue that the missile was unarmed, that it carried only a dummy. But if UK parliamentarians can be outraged by the concealment and the potentially “catastrophic consequences” of the test, I’m bereft that not a whimper of objection has come from Africa, the target.

    It was not even reported or mentioned in passing online or offline.

    Compare the deafening silence in Africa to the huffing and puffing in Washington and London following any real or rumoured attempt by the North Korean leader, Kim Jong-un, to test his missiles, which are potentially far less deadly or dependable.

    The unarmed UK missile that backfired in June has a range of 12,000km, which means it could land in any West African country from Florida where it was fired. And with nuclear payload of 1900 kilotons, which is nearly 95 times the destructive capacity of the nuclear bomb dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the Trident missile could leave swathes of the region, including Nigeria, in ruins.

    But the continent’s leaders were too preoccupied to notice. Jammeh was busy negotiating safe passage for his men and asking for oil block in Nigeria as condition for stepping down; President Muhammadu Buhari was away on a medical holiday abroad while the military authorities were hunting down journalists over spurious charges of criminal libel. And in South Africa, after surviving an internal rebellion, President Jacob Zuma, was busy devising a system for ANC members to spy on one another.

    Who is looking after the shop?

    Of course, we can’t even complain that Africa is not being treated with respect when its leaders are absent.

    And it’s not the first time in a decade. Did former President George Bush consult with Africa before setting up AFRICOM in 2007? Or did France discuss with the AU before deploying 3,000 troops to secure its interests in the region one year later?

    The point is that contempt tends to feed on itself, breeding even more contempt. If the UK, which obviously still treats the continent as its footstool, sees nothing wrong in aiming a dummy missile at us, there should be at least one leader apart from Robert Mugabe with enough mojo left to ask Whitehall to point its payload elsewhere.

    What’s the point, some would ask, aren’t our leaders committing more devastation than the 12 nuclear warheads of the Trident combined?

    See what the continent went through to get rid of Jammeh; consider the nonsense still going on in Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo’s Equatorial Guinea and Mugabe’s Zimbabwe; the fading hopes in South Africa; the rising crisis of expectation in Nigeria, and the millions of people across the continent broken and bruised by years of corruption and incompetent leadership.

    Could the Trident do worse, really?

    That is an unfair question. It paints the continent with the same brush of prejudice, completely ignoring the energy and innovative spirit of the vast populations of the young and the stories from bright spots like Tanzania, Ethiopia, Kenya and Rwanda.

    Let’s be clear. We may have our problems – compounded by bad leaders and complicit followers – but nothing justifies turning the continent into a playground for nukes, with or without a payload.

    The continent’s silence was shameful and a quiet approval to the world to do even worse.

    We have endured toxic waste, blood diamonds, poaching and cheap substandard goods, not to mention apartheid, slavery and racism, from countries that claim to love the continent more than it loves itself.

    To let the UK – or any other country – make the continent the new testing field for missiles is a luxury we cannot afford. It has to be said loud and clear: the backfired nuke test in Florida should be the last.

     

    Ishiekwene in the MD/Editor-In-Chief of The Interview and member of the board of the Paris-based Global Editors Network

     

     

     

     

     

  • Over 170 killed in Rann Bombing – MSF

     

    A group, Médecins Sans Frontières, MSF has said over 170 people were killed in the accidental bombing that occurred in Rann, Borno State on Tuesday.

    MSF said around 90 people were killed on the spot when a Nigerian airforce plane circled twice and dropped two bombs in the middle of the town of Rann, which hosts thousands of internally displaced people.

    MSF stated that at the time of the attack, an aid distribution was taking place, adding that outside of what MSF teams had witnessed, consistent reports from residents and community leaders say as many as 170 people were killed.

    This figure needs to be confirmed. The victims of this horrifying event deserve a transparent account of what happened and the circumstances in which this attack took place. Many of the survivors will need long-term care and support for the future,” says Bruno Jochum, MSF General Director.

    People had sought safety in what they thought was a protected site – instead they were bombed by those who were meant to safeguard them.

    The tragedy in Rann too clearly illustrates the dire situation in Borno State, where extremely vulnerable people remain trapped in a cycle of daily violence between the Nigerian military and Boko Haram.

    This intense violence has led to the displacement of nearly three million people over the past few years, who are still in urgent need of protection and assistance.

    The population continues to pay the price of a merciless conflict, where the war between Boko Haram and Nigerian military too often disregards the safety of civilians.

    The people of Borno should be entitled to guarantees of protection and assistance. All parties to the conflict must ensure the safety of civilians, and we urge the Government of Nigeria to ensure the protection of its people”, he added.

  • Several dead as Nigerian jet mistakenly drops bomb on IDP camp

    Several Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) were reportedly killed after a military plane mistakenly dropped a bomb inside the Rann IDP camp in Borno State.

    The Rann IDP camp in Kala-balge Local Government Area caters for thousands of persons displaced by Boko Haram.

    “At least hundred people were injured and needed to be evacuated to hospitals.

    At least two people are feared dead from the incident and the injured included officials of the Doctors without Borders, MSF.” Witness told Premium Times

    The military spokesperson, Rabe Abubakar, a brigadier general, confirmed the incident but explained that it was an error that the military deeply regretted.

    He explained that soldiers got information of movement of Boko Haram members and deployed ground troops and air cover to tackle the terrorists.

    The Theatre Commander of Nigerian forces in Borno, Lucky Irabor, a major general, also confirmed the attack at a press conference.

    “This morning today, we received reports about gathering of Boko Haram terrorists somewhere in Kala Balge Local Government area of Borno State. We got a coordinate and I directed that the air should go to address the problem.

    “Unfortunately the strike was conducted but it turned out that the locals somewhere in Rann were affected.

    “We are yet to get the details of the casualties. But we have some civilians that have been killed, others are wounded and we also have two of our soldiers that were also wounded. Among some that are wounded are local staffs of the Medicine Sans Frontiers as well as ICRC,” he said.