National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) northeast region
spokesman Abdulkadir Ibrahim said two female suicide bombers tried to get into
the camp but were thwarted by security personnel.
“Two other female suicide bombers also detonated their
explosives at the adjoining Dalori Kofa village, where they killed 16 people,”
he added in a statement.
NEMA said the attacks took place at about 8:45 p.m. (1945
GMT) on Sunday close to the Dalori camp at Kofa village.
Earlier tolls given by local people said at least 12 or 13
people had been killed but Abdulkadir said three of those injured and taken to
hospital had since died.
“The 16 does not include the bombers,” he told AFP. Adding
the two dead suicide bombers brings the death toll up to 18.
Two female suicide bombers were intercepted when they tried
to gain access into Dalori 2 Internally Displaced People (IDP) camp.
A NEMA statement said that two of the female suicide bombers
were intercepted and taken into custody. “The injured victims have been
administered with first aid and transported to hospitals within,” NEMA said.
Dalori is about 10 kilometres (six miles) southeast of
Maiduguri and is one of the largest camps for internally displaced people (IDP)
in the remote region.
Boko Haram has previously tried to target the camp: at least
85 people were killed in January last year when insurgents rampaged through
communities near Dalori.
Residents were shot and their homes burned down while female
suicide bombers blew themselves up among the crowds of people fleeing the
violence.
The latest attack is the most deadly in Nigeria since June
8, when 11 people were killed in a rare combined gun and suicide attack in the
Jiddari Polo area of Maiduguri.
Boko Haram has repeatedly targeted the strategic city,
particularly its outlying communities, IDP camps and the city’s university.
The bombings and sporadic hit-and-run attacks underline the
threat still posed by the extremists, despite claims from the authorities they
are a spent force.
Gunmen killed eight members of a civilian militia force
assisting the military on June 11 in the Konduga area, which is on the same
road as the Dalori camp.
At least 20,000 people have been killed in the conflict
since 2009 and more than 2.6 million made homeless, many of whom are facing
severe food shortages or starvation.
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