A bomb
blast at a busy meat market in the north-eastern Nigerian city of Maiduguri on
Tuesday killed about 50 people, an eyewitness and hospital sources said, in an
attack that bore the hallmarks of
Islamist Boko Haram militants.
Boko Haram
has killed thousands of people and displaced some 1.5 million in an insurgency
to establish an Islamic caliphate in the northeast of Nigeria but appears to
have lost most of the territory it seized to government counter-offensives this
year.
The bomb,
which was concealed under a butcher's table in the market, went off at around 1
p.m., killing shoppers and passers-by, a military source said.
There was
no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack, which followed two weekend
bombings that killed at least 30 people and appeared to be the handiwork of
Boko Haram.
Meanwhile,
a video purporting to show Boko Haram militants and featuring an unidentified
hooded speaker was posted on social media websites on Tuesday.
The
speaker accused Nigeria and three adjacent states that have combined to fight
the Islamist militants - Niger, Chad and Cameroon - of lying about recent
military successes that they said had pushed the jihadists back into a rural
pocket.
"Most
of our territory is still under control," he said.
"Whoever
believes that the Nigerian army has defeated us.... know that we have battled
against them and killed them," he added in a 10-minute video that featured
blood-soaked corpses.
The film
included footage of what appeared to be pieces of a Nigerian jet.
"President of Nigeria, here are your goods," says a militant in the
video.
Goodluck
Jonathan's presidency ended with the inauguration on Friday of successor
Muhammadu Buhari, who has pledged to wipe out Boko Haram.
In the
aftermath of the latest Maiduguri blast, paramedic Lawal Kawu said 31 burned bodies had been moved
to the teaching hospital in Maiduguri, and several other people were brought in
with severe injuries.
Witnesses
said they heard a loud explosion.
"It
shook our school building and I had to run away. I saw military vehicles with
soldiers moving toward the area," Abubakar Mohammed, a college student who
was a few meters away from the blast scene.
Boko Haram
appears to be returning to insurgent tactics since losing territory gained in
2014 to offensives by Chadian, Nigerien and Nigerian troops over the past few
months. It maintains a last stronghold in the Sambisa forest reserve.
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