Blast hits fans at World Cup screening in Nigeria

Jun 18, 2014

An explosion ripped through a football viewing centre in Damaturu, northern Nigeria on Tuesday, police and residents said, as fans gathered to watch the World Cup.

KANO - An explosion ripped through a football viewing centre in Damaturu, northern Nigeria on Tuesday, police and residents said, as fans gathered to watch the World Cup.

The blast at the Crossfire venue, in the Nayi-Nawa area of the state capital of Yobe, happened shortly after tournament hosts Brazil kicked off against Mexico at 8:00 pm (1900 GMT).

There were no immediate reports of deaths, but hospitals were reporting casualties being brought in, medical sources said.

Sanusi Ruf'ai, police commissioner for Yobe state, told AFP: "There was an explosion outside a soccer viewing centre here in Damaturu at around 8:15 pm.

"Our men have deployed to the scene but it's too early for us to give details."

One resident said the area had been cordoned off as police and soldiers were sent to the scene.

The blast comes after at least two states banned viewing centres on security grounds following previous attacks blamed on Boko Haram militants, whose five-year insurgency in northern Nigeria has claimed thousands of lives.

Football 'a Western ploy

Yobe is one of three northeastern states that has been under a state of emergency since last May.

The authorities in Adamawa, in northeast Nigeria, last week closed viewing centres, where large crowds gather to watch matches on the big screen, while the central state of Plateau followed suit days later.

Earlier this month, at least 40 people were killed when a bomb went off after a football match in the town of Mubi in Adamawa. The apparent target was fans trying to leave after the final whistle.

In May, three people were killed in a blast outside a viewing centre showing the European Champions League final between Real Madrid and Atletico Madrid in Jos, the capital of Plateau state.

In April, suspected Boko Haram gunmen stormed a packed venue in Potiskum, in northeast Yobe state, shooting dead two people as they watched Champions League quarter-final matches.

Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau has previously preached against football as part of the Islamist group's agenda to impose strict Islamic law in northern Nigeria.

In several video clips, he described football and music as a Western ploy to distract Muslims from their religion.

Football is Nigeria's national sport and has a fanatical following, and the Brazil tournament should normally spell weeks of revelry as crowds gather in giant, often open-air venues to cheer on their heroes.

But many people in the north have said they would watch the World Cup at home because of fears of Boko Haram attacks.

"I'm not comfortable going to any viewing centre due to the Boko Haram threats," Kano resident Danlami Ma'azu told AFP last week.

Similar fears have also put east African nations on high alert over possible attacks by Somalia's Al-Qaeda-linked Shebab rebels during football screenings.

Britain has released warnings to citizens in several east African nations -- including Ethiopia, Djibouti and Kenya, who all have troops in Somalia -- speaking of the threat of attacks at public screenings of the World Cup.

"Previous terrorist attacks in the region have targeted places where football matches are being viewed," Britain's Foreign Office said, adding that crowded areas including "transport hubs, hotels, restaurants and bars" are also possible targets.

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AFP

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