Suicide bombers struck two bus stations in
different parts of northern Nigeria on Tuesday, killing at least 26 people in
attacks President Goodluck Jonathan blamed on Boko Haram, the Islamist militant
group he said would soon be defeated.
In the
first, a suicide bomber rushed onto a bus in the northeastern town of Potiskum
before setting off a blast that destroyed the bus and killed 16 people,
according to security and hospital sources.
A
police spokesman said the bomber was a man, but that some witnesses had
mistakenly blamed a teenage girl who was in fact one of the victims. On Sunday,
a girl with explosives strapped to her killed five people outside a market in
the same town.
In
Tuesday's second attack, two suicide bombers in a car struck a major bus
station in the north's main city of Kano, killing at least 10 people, police
spokesman Ibrahim Idris said.
A
Reuters witness saw the twisted, burnt wreckage of four vehicles and the
charred remains of at least two bodies.
"I saw the vehicle drive
up to that point and just a few minutes later there was a loud blast,"
said witness Bello Gearam. "Some people were burning, others
running."
President Jonathan blamed Boko
Haram, whose struggle for an Islamic state in religiously mixed Nigeria has
killed thousands of people and displaced over a million.
The use of suicide bombers has
become a common tactic of Boko Haram since last year as the group expanded
territory and became stronger and more deadly. But in the past three weeks it
has begun to suffer a string of defeats in a military offensive by Nigeria and
neighbours Cameroon, Niger and Chad, all of which have been destabalised by the
Islamists.

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