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Seven killed in Nigeria blasts

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Seven killed in Nigeria blasts : police


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Performers hold flares during a late night ceremony commemorating Nigeria's 50th independence anniversary in the capital Abuja September 30, 2010.
Credit: REUTERS/Afolabi Sotunde

By Kingsley Igwe

ABUJA | Fri Oct 1, 2010 8:19am EDT

ABUJA (Reuters) - Seven people were killed and three injured in explosions that hit Nigeria's capital on Friday near a parade marking the 50th anniversary of independence, police said.
Two explosions, which also destroyed three cars, came an hour after the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND), Nigeria's biggest rebel militia, issued an email warning saying it had planted several bombs and telling people to evacuate the area.

A Reuters cameraman said security forces and firemen had been trying to douse a fire in a car after the first explosion when a second blast hit.
The lavish celebrations of military bands, troupes of dancing children and military exercises continued as planned. Given its warning, the finger of blame will rest heavily on MEND, which has been fighting for years for a greater share of oil revenues from the impoverished Niger Delta, home to Africa's biggest oil and gas industry.

Although most of its activities have been focused on the creeks and swamps of the delta, MEND has struck further afield, including at off-shore oil installations and in the heart of Nigeria's commercial capital, Lagos. "Several explosive devices have been successfully planted in and around the venue by our operatives working inside the government security services," the warning email, signed by MEND spokesman Jomo Gbomo, said.
"In evacuating the area, keep a safe distance from vehicles and trash bins."

"WASTED GENERATION"

Broadcast television footage showed no interruption to the 50th birthday celebrations.
Shortly after the warning, President Goodluck Jonathan, who faces an election early next year, arrived in an armoured limousine dressed in his traditional black fedora hat and dark suit, before inspecting ranks of soldiers from an open-top jeep. Jonathan is from the Niger Delta area, and many analysts thought his accession to the presidency earlier this year after the death of president Umaru Yar'Adua would have eased tensions between rebels and central government.

Despite the official pomp, the 50-year landmark has caused considerable introspection among Nigeria's 140 million people, many of whom regard the period since the end of British rule in 1960 as a half-century of broken dreams. As well as a succession of brutal and economically disastrous military dictatorships and the squandering of billions of dollars in oil revenues, Nigeria suffered a civil war in the late 1960s in which a million people died.

"Leadership has failed the nation again and again and again," said author Wole Soyinka, the first African to win the Nobel Prize for Literature, describing the post-colonial era as a "wasted generation." "It has been backwards steps -- one step forwards and then ten back." Despite the gloom, others feel that after 10 years of unbroken civilian rule, Nigeria is on the cusp of a major revival, supported by high oil prices, a flood of foreign investment and gradual liberalization of its economy.

(Additional reporting by Camillus Eboh, Writing by Ed Cropley; Editing by Giles Elgood)


 
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Mitsuhide Akechi

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Car bomb attacks on Nigeria's independence day kill eight


Car bomb attacks on Nigeria's independence day kill eight


At least eight people were killed in Abuja on Friday when two car bombs blew up during celebrations for Nigeria's 50th independence anniversary.

Published: 6:38PM BST 01 Oct 2010

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Friday's attacks were the militants' boldest yet, striking in Nigeria's capital during an event with heavy security held hundreds of miles from the delta Photo: AP

The unprecedented attack in the capital was carried out by The Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta, the main militant group in the country's oil-rich southern delta. The group had threatened to attack the festivities and warned people to stay away. "For 50 years, the people of the Niger Delta have had their land and resources stolen from them," the group said in a statement.

While Nigeria, Africa's most populous nation, is oil rich most people live on around 60p a day. The delta is very impoverished and polluted from spills.
A third and smaller explosion hit a venue at Eagle Square where President Goodluck Jonathan stood with other dignitaries, about a 10-minute walk from where the car bombs detonated. Friday's attacks were the militants' boldest yet, striking in Nigeria's capital during an event with heavy security held hundreds of miles from the delta.

The car bombings seemed to be designed to lure responders to the first bomb and then kill them with a second blast. Five minutes after the first vehicle exploded, the second went off, killing at least eight people, a police officer at the scene said. In a statement on Friday afternoon to the Associated Press news agency, the militant group acknowledged that it knew allowing the second car bomb to detonate would put passers-by at risk.

We "warned the authorities ahead of time who decided to ignore the warning and alert the public," the group said. It added: "The blame goes to the Nigerian authorities and our message to the families of those who may have been affected is that we deeply regret any loss of life." Upset by oil spills and the region's unceasing poverty, militants in the delta have targeted pipelines, kidnapped petroleum company workers and fought government troops since 2006.


 
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