Friday, August 26, 2011

Nigeria attack:

Islamist militants claim responsibility for UN building blastAl-Qaida-linked group, Boko Haram, says it was behind the deadly explosion in Abuja that left at least 18 people dead
guardian.co.uk, Friday 26 August 2011 21.45 BST


Boko Haram says it was behind the suicide attack on the UN building which killed at least 18 people. Photograph: Henry Chukwuedo/AFP/Getty Images

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Nigeria's capital was on high alert on Friday after an apparent suicide attack on the United Nations headquarters in Abuja stoked fears that Islamist militants were setting their sights on high-profile targets inAfrica's most populous country.

The car bomb – the first attack on the UN in Nigeria – ripped through the heavily fortified UN building, killing at least 18 people. Describing those who carried out the apparent suicide bombing as "barbaric", President Goodluck Jonathan ordered all relevant government agencies to help in the search and rescue effort.

"The president believes that the attack is a most despicable assault on the United Nations' objectives of global peace and security, and the sanctity of human life to which Nigeria wholly subscribes," the president's office said in a statement.

The UN secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, who asked his deputy, Asha-Rose Migiro, to go to Nigeria immediately, said: "This was an assault on those who devote their lives to helping others. We condemn this terrible act, utterly."

The Islamist group Boko Haram told the BBC in a phone call that it had carried out the attack. If the claim turns out to be genuine, the attack would confirm American fears that al-Qaida-affiliated groups are targeting the important west African state.

Witnesses said a car rammed through two separate gates at the UN compound as guards tried to stop it. The suicide bomber drove up to the main reception area before blowing himself up.

"I saw scattered bodies," Michael Ofilaje, a Unicef worker at the building, told the Associated Press. "Many people are dead." He said it felt like "the blast came from the basement and shook the building."

About 400 UN employees work in the building, grouping several UN agencies, including the UN Development Programme, Unicef, the children's agency and the UN Population Fund. The building is located in the same area as foreign embassies, including the British embassy, which is currently under construction.

Workers brought three large cranes to the wrecked building within hours of the attack, trying to pull away the concrete and rubble to find survivors. Others at the site stood around, stunned, as medical workers began carrying out what appeared to be the dead.

Hussaini Abdu, country director of ActionAid, who works in a building close to the explosion, said he and his colleagues felt the shock from the blast.

"We were in a meeting on the second floor of our building when we felt it shake," said Abdu in a telephone interview. "At first we thought it was a blast from the construction that was going on, a minute later we saw smoke from the building. I made a couple of calls that confirmed it was an attack. The five or six people I spoke to are deeply traumatised, some are still in shock, some had brought their children as it's a school holiday. The UN is in one of the most fortified buildings in Abuja and it is in quite a secure area with all the embassies there."

Boko Haram – Hausa for "western education is sinful" – carried out a similar attack on the Abuja police headquarters in June, nearly killing the police chief. Earlier this month, the commander for US military operations in Africa said Boko Haram may be trying to connect with other al-Qaida-linked groups to mount joint attacks in Nigeria.

General Carter Ham told AP during a visit to Nigeria that "multiple sources" indicate Boko Haram made contacts with al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb, which operates in north-west Africa, and with al-Shabaab in Somalia.

"I think it would be the most dangerous thing to happen not only to the Africans, but to us as well," Carter said.

Analysts said if Boko Haram had carried out the attack, it indicated how far the group had moved into al-Qaida's orbit in the past year.

"It would also show how Boko Haram is striking out from its normal north-east area," said Henry Wilkinson, an analyst at Janusian, a risk management company. "It's probable what we're seeing is a move away from its parochial approach to ideas of global jihad, which would explain choosing the UN as a target. They also use the same jihadi clearing house, al-Andalus, for issuing their messages."

Nigerian authorities have attempted to clamp down on the group through Operation Flush, following violent clashes with government forces across four states in 2009 in which more than 700 people were killed. The government, which has since increased its military presence, was later accused of carrying out extra-judicial killings.

Boko Haram's founder, Mohammed Yusuf, was captured and shot dead by security forces in 2009.

This year's presidential election in Nigeria, won by Goodluck Jonathan, was seen as the fairest since the end of military rule but it left the country sharply divided between the mostly Muslim north and the largely Christian south. Militant attacks in the oil-producing regions of the south have dropped off, but the north has been hit by a round of bombings and killings by Islamist extremists, prompting fears violence could spread
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.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/aug/26/nigeria-attack-islamists-claim-responsibility

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