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Twin blasts kill 10 in northeast Nigeria - police

by Reuters
Friday, 3 July 2015 08:33 GMT

Nigerian soldiers hold up a Boko Haram flag that they had seized in the recently retaken town of Damasak, Nigeria, March 18, 2015. REUTERS/Emmanuel Braun

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A military source said in both cases the suicide bombers targeted crowded areas

MAIDUGURI, Nigeria, July 3 (Reuters) - Two suicide bomb blasts along a highway in northeast Nigeria killed at least 10 people on Thursday afternoon, state police said, the latest in a string of almost daily attacks by suspected Islamist militants.

A female suicide bomber killed seven and injured 13 at a village called Malari on the main road from Bama to Konduga while a second suicide bomber killed three in blast along the same road, Borno state police chief Aderemi Opadokun said.

A military source said in both cases the suicide bombers targeted crowded areas where locals sell fruit along the highway, which runs southeast of the state capital Maiduguri.

Thousands of people have been killed and about 1.5 million displaced during Boko Haram's six-year fight to create an Islamic caliphate in the northeast of Africa's top oil producer.

Boko Haram controlled an area roughly the size of Belgium at the end of 2014 before a military offensive seized much of the territory in the first few months of this year.

The militants have since mostly resorted to deadly hit-and-run attacks on remote villages and the use of suicide bombers.

Opadokun also confirmed Boko Haram attacked the town of Kukawa not far from Lake Chad on Wednesday evening. He said the attackers killed "many" and burned down houses.

The state police chief did not give a death toll from the attack. He said at least eight injured residents from Kakuawa had been treated at a Maiduguri hospital. (Reporting by Lanre Ola; Editing by David Clarke and James Macharia)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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