KANO, Nigeria (AP) — Gunmen attacked
worship services at a university campus and a church in northern Nigeria,
killing at least 21 people in coordinated assaults that saw panicked Christians
gunned down as they tried to flee, witnesses and officials said.
The deadlier attack targeted an old
section of Bayero University's campus in the city of Kano where churches hold
Sunday services, with gunmen killing at least 16 people and wounding at least
22 others, according to the Nigerian Red Cross.
A later attack in the northeast city
of Maiduguri saw gunmen open fire at a Church of Christ in Nigeria chapel,
killing five people, including a pastor preparing for Communion, witnesses
said.
No group immediately claimed
responsibility, but the attacks bore similarities to others carried by a
radical Islamist sect known as Boko Haram.
The Bayero University attack
occurred around an old theater and lecture halls where local churches hold
services, Kano state police commissioner Ibrahim Idris said. The gunmen rode
into the campus on motorcycles, then threw small explosives made out of soda
cans around the area, Idris said.
The worshippers ran out in an
attempt to escape, only to be shot by the waiting gunmen, the commissioner
said.
"By the time we responded, they
entered (their) motorcycles and disappeared into the neighborhood," the
commissioner said.
After the attack, police and
soldiers cordoned off the campus as gunfire echoed in the surrounding streets.
Abubakar Jibril, a spokesman for Nigeria's National Emergency Management
Agency, said security forces refused to allow rescuers to enter the campus.
Soldiers also turned away journalists from the university.
The city of Maiduguri, the target of
second attack, is where Boko Haram once had its main mosque.
Witnesses who declined to give their
names out of fear the sect would target them said the gunmen stormed into the
service and began firing. Most escaped, though as people came out of hiding
later they found the pastor dead in a pool of blood in the sanctuary, witnesses
said. Four other worshippers died in the attack, they said.
Borno state police spokesman Samuel
Tizhe later confirmed the attack took place and said officers would
investigate.
Representatives of Boko Haram, who
typically speak to journalists at times of their choosing in telephone
conference calls, could not immediately be reached for comment Sunday.
Boko Haram is waging a growing
sectarian battle with Nigeria's weak central government, using suicide car
bombs and assault rifles in attacks across the country's predominantly Muslim
north and around its capital, Abuja. Those killed have included Christians,
Muslims and government officials. The sect has been blamed for killing more
than 450 people this year alone, according to an Associated Press count.
Diplomats and military officials say
Boko Haram has links with two other al-Qaida-aligned terrorist groups in
Africa. Members of the sect also reportedly have been spotted in northern Mali,
an area where Tuareg rebels and hardline Islamists seized control over the past
month.
In January, a coordinated assault on
government buildings and other sites in Kano by Boko Haram killed at least 185
people. In the time since, the sect has been blamed for attacking police
stations and carrying out smaller assaults in the city.
On Thursday, the sect carried out a
suicide car bombing at the Abuja offices of the influential newspaper ThisDay
and a bombing at an office building it shared with other publications in the
city of Kaduna. At least seven people were killed in those attacks. Late
Thursday night, gunmen also bombed a building at the campus of Gombe State
University, though authorities said no one was injured in the attack.
Boko Haram has rejected efforts to
begin indirect peace talks with Nigeria's government. Its demands include the
introduction of strict Islamic law across the country, even in its
predominantly Christian south, and the release of all imprisoned followers.
Churches also have been increasingly
targeted by Boko Haram. A Christmas Day suicide bombing of a Catholic church in
Madalla near Nigeria's capital killed at least 44 people.
Nigeria, a multiethnic nation of
more than 160 million people, has seen anger grow over crushing poverty and
corrupt politicians in the north, fueling resentment against the government and
the West in the oil-rich nation.
Associated Press
by Jon Gambrell
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