2 Female Suicide Bombers Kill At Least 22 People In Nigeria

The women detonated their explosives at a mosque during morning prayers.
Two female suicide bombers killed 22 people at a mosque during morning prayers in a village outside Maiduguri, northeastern Nigeria.
Two female suicide bombers killed 22 people at a mosque during morning prayers in a village outside Maiduguri, northeastern Nigeria.
Gbenga Olamikan/ASSOCIATED PRESS

MAIDUGURI, Nigeria (Reuters) - Two female suicide bombers killed 22 people on Wednesday at a mosque outside the northeastern Nigerian city of Maiduguri, the heart of a seven-year-old insurgency by Islamist Boko Haram militants, a military spokesman said.

The attack, which also wounded 18 people, occurred during morning prayers in the village of Ummarari, six km (four miles) from the center of the capital of Borno state in Africa's most populous country and biggest energy producer.

It was the first such assault in the northeast since early February, when two suicide bombers - also women - blew themselves up at a camp for internally displaced people in Dikwa, 85 km (50 miles) from Maiduguri..

"Sadly, 22 people were killed and 18 others sustained various degrees of injuries ... The first attack targeted a mosque, while the second blast was about 50 meters away, a few minutes later," said military spokesman Colonel Sani Usman.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack, the first in Maiduguri since 65 people were killed in January, but it resembled others by Boko Haram in its campaign to carve out an Islamic state in the region.

"One of the two female bombers, disguised as a male worshipper, joined other Muslim brothers in the mosque at Ummarari-Molai during ... prayers," said Malum Farouk, a member of a grassroots security group in a civilian joint task force.

(Additional reporting by Isaac Abrak in Abuja; Writing by Alexis Akwagyiram; Editing by Mark Heinrich)

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