KANO, Nigeria (Reuters) - Gunmen
exploded bombs and opened fire on worshippers gathered at the central
mosque of north Nigeria's biggest city, Kano, for Friday prayers,
witnesses said, in an attack that bore the hallmarks of the Islamist
militant group Boko Haram.
"These people have bombed the mosque. I am face to face with
people screaming," said Chijjani Usman, a local reporter who had gone
to the mosque in the old city for prayers himself.
The mosque is adjacent to the palace of the emir of Kano,
the second highest Islamic authority in the country, although the emir
himself, former central bank governor Lamido Sanusi, was not present at
the time.
A
staff member at the palace who also witnessed the attack said: "After
multiple explosions, they also opened fire. I cannot tell you the level
of casualties because we all ran away."
A police spokesman in Kano declined to make any immediate
comment. There was also no immediate claim of responsibility, but
suspicion is likely to fall on Boko Haram, which has for five years
waged a campaign to revive a medieval Islamic caliphate governed by
sharia law.
Boko Haram's fighters have killed thousands in gun and bomb attacks on
churches, schools, police stations, military and government buildings,
and even mosques that do not share their radical Islamist ideology.
Hundreds of thousands have been driven from their homes.
They regard the traditional Islamic authorities in Nigeria
with distain, seeing them as a corrupt, self-serving elite that is too
close to the secular government.
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