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14 December 2014

Boko Haram 'likely behind Jos, Nigeria bombings'


Lagos - A double bomb attack that killed 31 people in a crowded market in the central Nigerian city of Jos was likely to have been carried out by Boko Haram, the state government said on Friday.

"It's an extension of the terrorist acts that have been penetrating all states and cities," Pam Ayuba, spokesman for the Plateau state governor Jonah Jang, told AFP by telephone.

The blasts happened at about 18:00 on Thursday at a makeshift market near the Terminus bus station, not far from the site of a previous attack in May that left at least 118 dead.


Boko Haram's leader Abubakar Shekau later claimed the attack.

Widespread rioting

Ayuba said the Plateau state government had previously received intelligence about the possibility of a new attack by the militants and ruled out any political link to the violence.

Jos, which lies in the central "Middle Belt" where Nigeria's mostly Muslim north meets it mainly Christian south, has been a flashpoint for years.

After the 2011 elections, widespread rioting left hundreds dead.

But Ayuba said that political party primaries for next year's general elections had taken place in recent days and passed off "without any rancour".

"Everything was peaceful, so politics is overruled. It's a continuation of the wanton killing of the kind conducted by the terrorists," he added, referring to the Islamist group.

Governor Jang has warned people in the city to be on their guard and appealed for calm.

A senior rescue official said on condition of anonymity because he was not authorised to talk to the media that 14 people were being treated for injuries at four separate hospitals in the city.