Boko Haram on Saturday claimed responsibility for a suicide bombing on a
Shiite Muslim procession near the northern Nigerian city of Kano that
killed 22 people.
The hardline Islamist group said in a statement in Arabic on social media
its bomber “detonated his explosives which led to the death” of the
victims on Friday.
“And by the permission of Allah these attacks of ours against Shi’a
polytheists will continue ýuntil we cleanse the earth of their filth,” it
warned.
At least 21 people were initially reported killed but the toll rose after
one more person was confirmed dead.
“For now, we have 22 deaths following the death of one more person
yesterday. Thirty-eight people have also been injured, two of whom have
been discharged from the hospital,” one of the organisers of the march Ali
Kakaki told AFP Saturday.
He said that, despite the attack on Friday, the Islamic Movement of
Nigeria members had continued their march from Kano to Zaria in
neighbouring Kaduna state, where their leader Sheikh Ibrahim Zakzaky is
based.
The march is to mark Ashura, which commemorates the death of Hussein, the
grandson of the Prophet Mohammed.
“Following the attack, many more of our members have joined the
procession,” Kakaki said, adding that they aimed to arrive at their
destination next week.
Friday’s attack took place in the village of Dakasoye, some 20 kilometres
(13 miles) south of the city of Kano.
One of the procession’s organisers said a bomber clad in black ran into
the crowd and detonated his explosives.
Boko Haram, the radical Sunni jihadists who want to create a hardline
Islamic state in northeast Nigeria, has previously been blamed for attacks
on Shia Muslims in the region.
Boko Haram, whose six-year insurgency has left at least 17,000 people dead
and made more than 2.6 million homeless, condemns Shias as heretics who
should be killed.
The group has increasingly used suicide bombers against “soft” civilian
targets since the start of a military offensive earlier this year that
pushed them out of territory they controlled.
Nigeria’s President Muhammadu Buhari has given his military commanders
until next month to end the conflict but there are fears that suicide and
bomb attacks may persist.