An angry mob on Tuesday beat a suspected would-be suicide bomber to
death after he was accosted at a bus station in Gombe state, police and
witnesses said.
The man was stopped as he tried to get
into the
bus station in the Gombe state capital, Gombe city, where at least eight
people were killed in a series of blasts at the same location last
month.
“There was a scuffle. He was overpowered by the onlookers
who pounced on him in order to assist in making sure his bag was
searched,” state police commissioner Abdullahi Kudu told reporters.
“Mob
action overtook the event but we thank God he was not able to detonate
the explosives because he had a remote. The remote was equally
recovered.”
A bomb disposal team made safe the explosives, which
Kudu said were five rocket-propelled grenades, two mortars, two
cylinders and five detonators.
Residents also said that the man was killed on the spot and claimed
that he was himself wearing explosives, although it was not immediately
clear from the police version of events.
“The crowd lynched (beat)
him to death,” said Rabiu Wunti, while another witness Badaru Alkali
said locals then put a tyre around the man’s body, set it alight and
watched from a distance.
“The body exploded. No one was hurt,” he
said, without explaining why the mob would risk setting fire to a body
known to have explosives on it.
At least eight people were killed
and 34 injured on October 31 when explosions rocked the same bus station
during the morning rush hour.
The police said at the time that three suspects were arrested for allegedly planting the bombs, which were concealed in bags.
The
trio came from neighbouring Yobe to the north, which is one of three
northeast states under emergency rule because of sustained Boko Haram
violence.
Tuesday’s killing happened after one of Nigeria’s most
powerful Muslim leaders, the Emir of Kano, gave his public backing to
vigilantes fighting Boko Haram and urged others to form civilian
militias.
The comments, a rare foray into political and military
affairs by a cleric, were interpreted as a criticism of Nigeria’s armed
forces, who have failed to end the Boko Haram insurgency.
Source:PM News
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