bus station in a central Nigerian city as people searched for missing loved ones after the horrific attack that left at least 118 people dead.
Most victims are women and
children vendors from the market, said Mohammed Abdulsalam of the
National Emergency Management Agency.
Rescuers
are waiting for earthmovers to demolish buildings weakened by the blast
and move heavy debris so that they can safely search for more bodies,
he said.
"We expect to find more bodies in the rubble," Abdulsalam said.
Security
forces cordoned off the area of mounds of rubble, burned-out vehicles
and razed buildings with the debris of panic scattered around — a sandal
here, a hat there.
Gloria
Paul was among a handful of people at nearby Bingham University Teaching
Hospital, searching for her husband. All she found was his car parked
near Terminus Market, all the windows shattered.
The search for survivors was
halted Tuesday night by fires ignited in buildings by the massive blasts
that were heard miles (kilometers) away. Firefighters fought through
the night to douse the blazes that collapsed buildings, Abdulsalam told
The Associated Press in a telephone interview.
At least 118 bodies were delivered to hospital morgues Tuesday, and 64 people were hospitalized, he said.
The
city was tense with fears the attack being blamed on Islamic extremists
could inflame religious rivalry. Jos sits on a volatile fault line
dividing Nigeria's mainly Muslim north from the predominantly Christian
south and has been a flashpoint in the past for deadly conflict between
adherents of the two religions. Boko Haram wants to impose an Islamic
state under strict Shariah law in Nigeria, though half the country's 170
million people are Christians.
President
Goodluck Jonathan indicated that he blames the Boko Haram terrorist
network for Tuesday's attack, assuring Nigerians their government
"remains fully committed to winning the war against terror."
No group has claimed responsibility but Nigeria's homegrown Boko Haram terrorist network has been waging a bombing campaign.
The 5-year-old Islamic uprising
has grabbed international attention with the abduction of nearly 300
schoolgirls who the extremists are threatening to sell into slavery.
On
Monday a car bomb at a bus station killed 24 people in the Christian
quarter of the northern Muslim city of Kano, where police later defused
another massive car bomb. Two separate bomb blasts in April around
another bus station, in the nation's capital of Abuja, killed more than
120 people and wounded more than 200.
The
attacks on Monday and Tuesday took place after regional and Western
leaders pledged "total war" on the militant group at a weekend summit in
Paris.
The U.S. Embassy in
Abuja condemned Tuesday's attack and said the United States is helping
Ngieria to "grapple with violent extremism."
It
also urged calm in Jos. "We have seen reports that tensions are high in
Jos, and we join the voices of those who are appealing for calm."
The
insurgency has become ever-deadlier, with more than 2,000 people killed
this year compared to an estimated 3,600 between 2010 and 2013.
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