A gunman opened fire on Friday outside a school
in northeast Nigeria’s city of Potiskum, seriously wounding 12 students in an
area repeatedly targeted by Boko Haram, a police officer and witnesses said.
“We have evacuated 12 people with serious gunshot
wounds to hospital from the scene of the shooting attack,” said the officer,
who requested anonymity.
Many students at the College of Administrative
and Business Studies (CABS) in Potiskum, Yobe state, said the attacker with
explosives strapped to his body blew himself up when he ran out of ammunition,
but the blast caused no other casualties.
Following a wave of attacks in the city,
including on schools and colleges, students at CABS must pass through security
screening before entering the campus.
The gunman fired on a crowd waiting at the gate
to be screened shortly past 8:00 am (0700 GMT), witnesses said.
“We had just started a class when we heard
gunshots coming from the direction of the gates and we instantly realised we
were under attack which made us to rush out of the class,” student Tijjani Musa
said.
According to another student, Mustapha Umar, the
gunman managed to pass through the gates amid the chaos that broke out after he
began shooting.
“He kept firing sporadic shots,” but was chased
by a group of students who were frantically trying to subdue him, said Umar.
“When he ran out of ammunition he detonated the
explosives under his robe, killing himself but no one from the crowd,” Umar
told AFP.
While there was no immediate claim of
responsibility for the attack, Potiskum has frequently been targeted by Boko
Haram, which is responsible for leaving more than 15,000 people dead and
another 1.5 million homeless since 2009.
The group’s name means “Western education is
forbidden” and its leaders have previously vowed to strike institutions that
teach a secular curriculum.
Last November, at least 58 people were killed and
another 117 injured when a suicide bomber attacked a student assembly ground
inside the Government Comprehensive Secondary School which is next to
CABS.
That attack was blamed on Boko Haram.
One of the group’s most gruesome student
massacres also occurred in Yobe in September of 2013, when dozens of students
were killed in their sleep at the Federal Government College in the town of
Buni Yadi.
Nigeria’s military has claimed a series of major
victories over Boko Haram across the northeast during an operation launched in
February with support from neighbouring Cameroon, Chad and Niger.
But experts say the insurgents remain capable of
hit-and-run strikes, and may increasingly target soft civilian targets, despite
being weakened by the military offensive.
Outrage in Nigeria’s mainly Muslim north over the
government’s failure to protect civilians contributed in part to President
Goodluck’s defeat in March’s election, analysts said.
President-elect Muhammadu Buhari, a Muslim
northerner, won near total majorities in the region and has vowed to more
effectively combat the Islamist uprising.
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