Nigerian authorities, battling to stem an escalating Islamist
insurgency, covered up a bomb attack in Lagos by claiming a blast
near
Folawiyo fuel depot was an industrial accident.
According to investigation the blast was actually a bomb blast.
The
Lagos blast in the Apapa district which happened on 25 June, on the
main road feeding Nigeria’s busiest port and in an area housing most of
the city’s fuel depots, was blamed on a cooking gas cylinder which
exploded, with no casualties.
But AFP has seen photographs of the
scene showing a destroyed car plus damage to surrounding vehicles, which
the British Army’s former head of bomb disposal said left no doubt as
to the cause.
“This was definitely an incident involving the use
of high explosives,” Bob Seddon, an Iraq and Afghanistan veteran and a
specialist in improvised explosive devices (IEDs), told AFP in an email
exchange after reviewing the images.
“The type of blast effects and fragmentation pattern you would get
from a gas explosion are quite different,” the former Royal Logistics
Corps colonel said, assessing that 25-50 kilos (55-110 pounds) of
improvised high explosive were used.
Senior foreign diplomats also
indicated privately that the blast was deliberate, attributing the
official denials to fears over the potential effects of a confirmed
first attack on Lagos, which drives the country’s economy.
The
first suggestions of an attack appeared on social networking sites after
8:30 pm on June 25 and in local media the following day but failed to
gain wider attention because of government denials and the focus on the
deadly Abuja bombing.
Flat denials or no comment from the
government are not uncommon in Nigeria, particularly involving Boko
Haram, whose five-year insurgency has intensified in the northeast and
seen almost daily attacks.
But questions have lingered about the
Apapa incident because Lagos, in the southwest of the country, has so
far escaped the violence.
Lagos is home to some 20 million people
as well as major overseas companies in key sectors such as oil and gas.
The city is also seen as a gateway to trade in the wider west Africa
region.
There has been no claim of responsibility and Lagos state police have launched an investigation.
Federal
government spokesman Mike Omeri, who deals with homeland security
issues, told AFP the probe would “look at all issues… whether it is
IEDs, car bombings or accidents”.
Political and security
consultants Control Risks, which has an office in Lagos, said the Apapa
blast was a bombing that killed at least four people, according to a
briefing note seen by AFP that it sent to foreign business and
government clients.
“Drawing on eyewitness sources, Control Risks
assesses that the incident was a militant attack rather than an
industrial accident,” the group’s senior West Africa analyst, Roddy
Barclay, said in a separate interview.
Since 25 June, the Lagos
state government has ordered tighter security at key fuel and
infrastructure installations, and beefed up state hospitals’ capacity to
deal with mass casualty emergencies.
State health commissioner
Jide Idris said measures included increasing blood stocks and buying new
ambulances as well as putting all emergency units on stand-by.
But he maintained the measures were only because of the countrywide state of alert.
Seddon’s
analysis and Control Risks’ assessment chimed with the accounts of
seven eye-witnesses interviewed by AFP, who all said independently that
there were two explosions.
The first happened in and around the
gates of the Folawiyo fuel depot on Creek Road while the second minutes
later when a Toyota Sienna people carrier exploded in the road nearby,
they said.
“I was on duty that night,” said security guard Samuel
George. “All of a sudden, we heard a loud explosion and we quickly shut
the gate… Some minutes later, a car that was parked in the middle of the
road exploded.
“My colleague and I were hit by broken pieces of
metal from the car. I had a deep cut on my face and head and since then
have not been able to work. Many people were killed, including those I
knew,” the 25-year-old added.
Another local worker added: “I don’t know why the government is lying. The explosions were nothing short of bombings.”
Claims that the first explosion was caused by a female suicide bomber could not be verified with certainty.
The
head of the Yinka Folawiyo Group of Companies, which runs the fuel
depot, has denied that the blast happened inside the facility and
dismissed reports of fatalities, according to local media.
A US
government official said Boko Haram had the “operational reach to get to
Lagos” but only Control Risks has so far directly linked the bombing to
the group.
But Barclay qualified: “The incident is likely to have
been staged by a local Islamist network rather than being planned and
coordinated by Boko Haram’s core leadership in the northeast.”
Local groups have more parochial agendas, he added.
Further
attacks were credible, probably on “soft targets”, but the bombing did
not necessarily signal the start of a “sustained insurgency” in Lagos,
he said.
Source:PM News

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