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Car Bomb Explodes at Market in Northeast Nigeria

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BAUCHI, Nigeria — Jul 1, 2014, 4:54 AM ET
By HARUNA UMAR and MICHELLE FAUL Associated Press Associated PressA car bomb exploded in a market in Nigeria’s northeastern city of  Maiduguri on Tuesday morning, and dozens of people are feared dead,  witnesses said.They immediately blamed Boko Haram, the Islamic extremist group whose  birthplace is Maiduguri and which is accused of a series of recent bomb  attacks in the West African nation.Tuesday’s explosives were hidden under a load of charcoal in a pickup  van, according to witnesses who spoke on condition of anonymity for fear  of reprisals.Trader Daba Musa Yobe, who works near the popular market, said the bomb  went off just after the market opened at 8 a.m., before most traders or  customers had arrived.Other witnesses said they saw about 50 bodies, and that five cars and some tricycle taxis were set ablaze by the explosion.They said the toll could have been worse but fewer than normal traders  and customers were around because most people stay up late to eat during  Ramadan, the Muslim month of fasting from sunrise to sunset.A security official at the scene confirmed the blast, saying many  casualties are feared. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was  not permitted to speak to the press.Explosions last week targeted the biggest shopping mall in Abuja,  Nigeria’s central capital, killing 24 people; a medical college in  northern Kano city, killing at least eight; and a hotel brothel in  northeast Bauchi city that killed 10. It was the third bomb blast in as  many months in Abuja, and the second in two months in Kano. In May, twin  car bombs at a marketplace also left more than 130 dead in central Jos  city and killed at least 14 people at a World Cup viewing site in  Damaturu, another town in the northeast..Maiduguri, a city of more than 1 million people, has suffered many  attacks. In March, twin car bombs killed more than 50 people at a  late-night market where people were watching a football match on a big  screen.Boko Haram has attracted international attention and condemnation since  its April abduction of more than 200 schoolgirls from a northeastern  town.Nigeria’s military announced Monday night that it had busted a terrorist  intelligence cell and arrested a businessman who “participated  actively” in the mass abduction that caused outrage around the world.It was unclear if the first arrest of a suspect in the kidnappings could  help in rescuing at least 219 girls who remain captive. Boko Haram is  threatening to sell the girls into marriage and slavery if Nigeria’s  government does not exchange them for detained insurgents.Defense Ministry spokesman Maj. Gen. Chris Olukolade said in a statement  that businessman Babuji Ya’ari belonged to a vigilante group fighting  Boko Haram and used that membership as cover “while remaining an active  terrorist.”He said information yielded by Ya’ari’s detention had led to the arrests  of two women — one who worked as a spy and arms procurer and another  described as a paymaster.Boko Haram has adopted a two-pronged strategy this year of bombings in  urban areas and scorched-earth attacks in northeastern villages where  people are gunned down and their homes burned.On Sunday, suspected extremists sprayed gunfire on worshippers in four  churches in a northeastern village and torched the buildings. At least  30 people were reported killed there.The extremists have been attacking with more frequency and deadliness in recent months.

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