The details of this is yet to be made public.
Terrorists belonging to the extreme Islamist group, Boko Haram struck at a beer parlour cum football viewing centre in Mubi, Adamawa State. The suspected Boko Haram suicide bomber struck on Sunday as the beer parlour cum football viewing centre became filled up in the evening and not less than 60n people were reportedly killed. A security source confirmed the development to Reuters on Sunday. Emmanuel Akinyele, a church pastor, equally confirmed the bombing.
A military source said several bodies had been recovered from the site of the evening bombing in the town of Mubi in Adamawa state.
“We don’t have a precise death toll for you while work is still going on to remove the corpses,” said police spokesman for Adamawa state Usman Abubakar.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility. Islamist militant group Boko Haram, whose struggle for an Islamic state is concentrated in the northeast, would be the prime suspect.
The group has set off several bombs across north and central Nigeria in the past two months.
Last weekend, a suicide bomber set out to strike an open-air viewing of a football match in the central city of Jos, but his car blew up before reaching the target, killing three people.
A suicide bombing the week before in Jos killed 118 people, and two bombs on the outskirts of Abuja in April killed 95 between them.
The group is still holding more than 200 schoolgirls that it abducted on April 14.
Terrorists belonging to the extreme Islamist group, Boko Haram struck at a beer parlour cum football viewing centre in Mubi, Adamawa State. The suspected Boko Haram suicide bomber struck on Sunday as the beer parlour cum football viewing centre became filled up in the evening and not less than 60n people were reportedly killed. A security source confirmed the development to Reuters on Sunday. Emmanuel Akinyele, a church pastor, equally confirmed the bombing.
A military source said several bodies had been recovered from the site of the evening bombing in the town of Mubi in Adamawa state.
“We don’t have a precise death toll for you while work is still going on to remove the corpses,” said police spokesman for Adamawa state Usman Abubakar.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility. Islamist militant group Boko Haram, whose struggle for an Islamic state is concentrated in the northeast, would be the prime suspect.
The group has set off several bombs across north and central Nigeria in the past two months.
Last weekend, a suicide bomber set out to strike an open-air viewing of a football match in the central city of Jos, but his car blew up before reaching the target, killing three people.
A suicide bombing the week before in Jos killed 118 people, and two bombs on the outskirts of Abuja in April killed 95 between them.
The group is still holding more than 200 schoolgirls that it abducted on April 14.
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