Gunmen kill 28 in attack on Nigeria school

Attackers set fire to buildings and shot pupils as they tried to flee

Nigeria president Goodluck Jonathan who has ordered extra troops into the region to try to quell the  rebellion.
Nigeria president Goodluck Jonathan who has ordered extra troops into the region to try to quell the rebellion.

Suspected Islamist gunmen killed 27 students and a teacher in a boarding school in the northeast Nigerian town of Potiskum today, a police source said.

The attackers set fire to buildings and shot pupils as they tried to flee, the source told Reuters by email.

A hospital was treating several of the students for burns, he added.

It was the deadliest of three attacks on schools since the military launched an offensive in May to try to crush Boko Haram, whose nickname translates as “Western education is sinful” in the northern Hausa language.

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Under the leadership of Abubakar Shekau, Boko Haram rejects all western cultural influences such as modern schooling and yearns for the days when much of West Africa was ruled by great Islamic empires thriving off trans-Saharan trade.

Potiskum is in Yobe state, one of three covered by a state of emergency declared by president Goodluck Jonathan in May, when he ordered extra troops into the region to try to quell a rebellion seen as Nigeria’s biggest security headache.

The police source responded by email as the mobile phone network was cut to much of the northeast as part of the state of emergency.

“We are really terrified ... Everyone fear these school attacks are going to continue and even spread to other towns,” Bala Husseini, a resident of Potiskum who himself has two children not yet of school age, said in an emailed message.

In a separate attack hundreds of miles away in the town of Karim Lamido, Taraba state, suspected Islamist gunmen fired on a police station and a branch of First Bank, killing three policemen. A police official said the attackers blew up the bank’s vault with dynamite and made off with the cash.

The hit-and-run strikes have raised fears the 7-week-old military offensive has pushed the insurgents fighting for a breakaway Islamic state into hiding, but failed to stop them launching devastating attacks.

Reuters