Suspected bomb on edge of Nigerian capital kills at least 15
By Isaac Abrak and Afolabi Sotunde
The explosion hit the suburb of Nyanya, close to the site of a morning rush hour bomb attack at a bus station last month that killed at least 75 people. The April 14 attack was claimed by the radical Islamist movementBoko Haram which is waging an insurgency against President Goodluck Jonathan's government.
Kayode Adeyemi said he counted at least 15 bodies at the scene of the blast, which shook the ground next to him.
"It exploded just as commuters were waiting to board buses," he said. "I was about 100 metres away."
National Emergency Management Agency spokesman Manzo Ezekiel said at least 9 dead and 11 critically wounded were taken to hospital. Other wounded victims were being treated at the site. A Reuters photographer in a nearby hospital saw 11 charred bodies that medical staff said had been brought there from the place of the blast. Another witness to Thursday's blast, Joe Udofia, said there was a "deafening explosion, then the area near Nyanya bridge was on fire. There were many people in the vicinity."
The latest attack is an embarrassment for Jonathan's government, which had announced a massive security operation to protect the World Economic Forum on Africa scheduled for May 7-9 in Abuja. The forum, a regional replica of the Davos, Switzerland event, brings together international leaders, policy makers, entrepreneurs and philanthropists.
The government and the military have been under intense pressure to step up security in the country following the April 14 attack and the mass abduction by suspected Boko Haram militants the same day of more than 200 teenage schoolgirls from a northeastern school. Some of the girls escaped but most are still missing.
