Sunday 25 May 2014

Three dead as Champions League fans targeted in Nigeria blast | May 25, 2014

 Boko Haram kidnapped more than 250 girls from a secondary school in Chibok in remote northeastern Nigeria on April 14.
 JOS: At least three people were killed in the central Nigerian city of Jos in an explosion targeting football fans watching the European Champions League final, the authorities said.

Yesterday's blast came just days after a twin car bomb attack ripped through a crowded market in the city, killing 118 and raising fears of a spread of Boko Haram Islamist violence from the restive northeast.

"So far, we have three dead, three injured," Chris Olakpe, the commissioner of police for Plateau state, of which Jos is the capital, told AFP.

"The target was the (football) viewing centre." Olakpe said it was too early to say who may have been responsible for the blast, which came with people on edge and nerves frayed about a fresh strike.

The police chief also declined to comment on reports that the explosion was a suicide bombing but revealed that the bomber's improvised explosive device went off prematurely.

"He died in the wake of the heinous crime. He was consumed by his IED. It exploded before the viewing centre because of pressure from local youths and the alertness of the local people," he added.

Pam Ayuba, spokesman for the Plateau state governor Jonah Jang, said the blast happened at about 9.30pm (0200 IST, Sunday) on Bauchi Road, a predominantly Muslim area of the city.

Football is Nigeria's national sport and top European teams, particularly from the English Premier League but also Spain's top flight, have a fanatical following.

Spanish giants Real Madrid took the Champions League title yesterday.

So-called football "viewing centres" — often open air, big screen venues — have been targeted before, elsewhere in Nigeria.

Last month, suspected Boko Haram gunmen stormed a packed venue in Potiskum, northeast Yobe state, and shot dead two people showing the two Champions League quarter-final matches.

Police at the time did not directly blame Boko Haram for the attack but the group has been known for preaching against football as part of its agenda to impose strict Islamic law in northern Nigeria.

In several video clips, Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau has described football and music as a Western ploy to distract Muslims from their religion.

Tuesday's bombings in Jos — Nigeria's deadliest — came despite the government's internationally backed security crackdown after the militant group kidnapped more than 200 schoolgirls last month. : A massive explosion on Saturday night hit Nigeria's central Jos City, where more than 118 people were killed in a similar incident on Tuesday, police said without giving any casualty figures.

State police spokesperson Felicia Anselm said the incident was suspected to be a suicide bomb attack, noting the explosion occurred near the University of Jos, along the express way leading to northeast Bauchi State. "But details are still sketchy for now," Xinhua quoted her as saying.

Other sources said A lifeless body of the suicide bomber was found some 20 metres away from a football viewing centre, where soccer fans converged to watch the final of 2014 UEFA Champions League between Real Madrid and Atletico Madrid.

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