KANO, Nigeria: Two suspected suicide car bombers blew themselves up in coordinated attacks yesterday on two major telecoms companies in the volatile northern Nigerian city of Kano, officials said, but no other deaths were reported.
One of the attackers blew himself up when he rammed his car into the gate of an Airtel mobile phone company building, setting it ablaze. The second died when his car exploded outside the office of MTN, Nigeria’s largest mobile phone operator, police and the army said.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attacks in Kano, the largest city in mainly Muslim northern Nigeria, and no reports of any civilian deaths. The Islamist sect Boko Haram — notorious for shootings and bomb attacks across north and central Nigeria — has in the past targeted phone companies, accusing them of cooperating with the security services.
The National Emergency Management Agency said in a statement that there were “coordinated attacks by suicide bombers at facilities of two telecom operators in separate locations in Kano municipality”. A Kano policeman who requested anonymity confirmed the Airtel attack.
“The bomber rammed his car into the gate and blew himself up. The building is on fire,” he said.
Airtel worker Bayo Osho said his leg was injured in the blast. Officials from Airtel, one of the three biggest mobile phone service providers in Nigeria, were unavailable for comment.
In the second incident, a suspected bomber was blown up when his car exploded outside the gate of an MTN office which coordinates the company’s mobile telephone services in about a dozen states in the north, army spokesman Lieutenant Iweha Ikedichi said
No other casualties were recorded in the attack, he added.
Kano was the scene of Boko Haram’s deadliest attack yet in January, when at least 185 people were killed in coordinated bombings and shootings.
AFP