Five
explosions and a burst of gunfire hit an opposition rally in the town of Okrika
in southern Nigeria's oil producing Rivers state on Tuesday, wounding several
people, witness and the governor of the state said.
Opposition
All Progressives Congress (APC) Governor Rotimi Amaechi was not at the rally.
The town is home to Patience Jonathan, wife of President Goodluck Jonathan.
Rivers
state has been struck with several bomb blasts, none of them fatal, in the
build up to an election now set for March 28 after it was postponed from last
Saturday. This one targeted the rally of APC governorship aspirant Dakuku
Peterside.
Nigeria
has a long history of political thuggery and intimidation that have repeatedly
marred its polls since the end of military rule in 1999.
Violence
is rising ahead of voting, and Rivers state, where outgoing Governor Ameachi
defected to the opposition APC in 2013, is considered one of the major
flashpoints. Unidentified assailants threw dynamite at opposition coalition
offices in Rivers State a month ago. Amaechi blamed the
ruling People's Democratic Party (PDP)."It is intimidation. They
don't want people to come out and vote because they know they'll lose," he
said.
The PDP spokesman for Rivers
state Emmanuel Okah said by telephone that it was a clash between rival
"cultists", Nigerian university gangs that combine occult rituals
with criminal activities."Violence does not end
well and it is for that reason that we have continued to encourage our PDP
members to remain peaceful and law-abiding despite the recurring cases of
provocation by the APC...." Okah later said in a statement.

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