A part of Gwoza in north-eastern Nigeria as seen in mid-2017, years after it was retaken by Nigerian troops from Boko Haram. (STEFAN HEUNIS / AFP)
- Female suicide bombers attacked a funeral and a hospital in Nigeria’s Gwoza over the weekend.
- The death toll now stands at 32, the government said on Monday.
- Gwoza was once at the heart of Boko Haram territory.
The death toll from multiple suicide bombings in the northeastern Nigerian town of Gwoza over the weekend has risen to 32, the country’s vice president Kashim Shettima said Monday.
Saturday’s attacks involving female suicide bombers targeting a wedding, a hospital and a funeral was one of the worst in northeast Nigeria in years, a reminder of the darker days of the country’s long-running jihadist war.
“So far, 32 people lost their lives. Forty-two (injured) were brought from Gwoza,” Shettima said, visiting a hospital in the Borno State capital Maiduguri where some of the wounded were being treated.
Initial reports estimated the death toll at 18 people.
No group has claimed the blasts, but the Boko Haram jihadist group is active around Gwoza.
More than 40 000 people have been killed and another two million people displaced by the fighting which started in 2009.
Suicide bombings in towns have become rare since the army pushed militants back from territory they controlled at the height of the conflict in 2014, though they still carry out attacks and ambushes in rural areas.
“This incident is very shocking,” Borno senator for the ruling APC party Mohammed Ali Ndume told reporters. “This is a wake up call for all of us in Borno State, that we should not be relaxed about security.”
“The story of suicide bombing had gone from Borno, but it’s unfortunate it is rearing its ugly head again.”
On Saturday, Gwoza was the target of four almost simultaneous suicide attacks, including at least three perpetrated by female bombers, according to local emergency services. Dozens more were injured.
Suicide attacks, including by women, have always been part of the militants’ armed struggle to establish a caliphate in the northeast of Africa’s most populous country.
A witness said one of the women attackers had two children with her, though officials have not confirmed those details.
Boko Haram jihadists seized Gwoza in 2014 after taking over parts of Borno State, and declared the town the heart of its caliphate.
The town was retaken by the Nigerian army with the help of Chadian forces in 2015, but jihadists still launch attacks from the mountains overlooking the town on the border with Cameroon.
Nigerian President Bola Ahmed Tinubu condemned the attacks in a statement on Sunday, saying the assault was a “manifestation of pressure mounted against terrorists and the success in degrading their capacity”, and called it an “isolated episode”.
When he came to power a year ago, the Nigerian leader said dealing with insecurity was one of the main challenges for his government.
Nigeria’s armed forces are also fighting heavily armed kidnap gangs in the country’s northwest and simmering separatist tensions in the southeast.