Nigerian police said they had arrested a governor’s aide over a
church massacre and an attack on a military patrol that killed 23
people, but his involvement was not clear.
The attacks this month
were similar to scores blamed on Islamist militant group Boko Haram,
which has targeted Christians as well as the security forces in a series
of gun raids and suicide blasts.
Kogi state police chief Muhammed
Katsina said that special adviser to the state governor, Yahaya Karaku
and four others “are being detained and interrogated over their
suspected involvement in the attacks on the Deeper Life Church and
military patrol team”.
Gunmen stormed the evangelical church on
August 6 in Okene in Kogi state, cut the electricity and opened fire on
worshippers, killing 19 people including the pastor.
The following
day, assailants shot at troops patrolling outside a government building
in the city, sparking an exchange of gunfire that left two soldiers and
two of the gunmen dead.
“We want to determine the involvement of
these five suspects in these attacks as well as arms and ammunition
recovered in Okene and its environs,” Katsina told Greenwich news.
“We want
to trace the sources of these arms and those behind the attacks.”
Kogi
state government spokesman Jacob Edi confirmed the arrests of Karaku
and Abubakar Adagu, a former local government council chairman, vowing
that officials would not protect them if they are found culpable.
“The
law must take it course,” Edi said.
It was not clear who carried
out the church killings or whether the two attacks were linked, although
a police spokesman has said there was “suspicion” that the same group
was responsible for both assaults.
The police also previously said
they had raided a suspected hideout of militants who carried out
attacks in the state, arresting a key leader and two other suspects.
The
Islamist sect Boko Haram, which has said it wants to create an Islamic
state in the north, is believed to include a number of factions,
including those with local political links.
The group has killed
more than 1,400 people since 2010 in attacks across northern and central
Nigeria, according to Human Rights Watch.
In another development,
a bomb blast in Jos, capital of Plateau state, has injured a civilian
and damaged a police station as well as nearby houses, an army
spokesman said on Friday.
“The police post, three other houses and
a vehicle were affected by the blast. One person by the name Alhaji
Abubakar Adam was injured,” Special Task Force spokesman in the city,
Captain Salisu Mustapha, said in a statement.
The bomb exploded
late Thursday between the police station and a residential building in
the Muslim-dominated Rikkos district of Jos, capital of Plateau state.
Plateau
has seen violent clashes between Christian and Muslim ethnic groups as
well as attacks blamed on Islamist militants Boko Haram. It lies in the
middle belt region between the mainly Christian south and majority
Muslim north.
“It is clear that the police station was the target
of the attack,” Mustapha told Greenwich news.
Nigeria has tightened security
ahead of this weekend’s Eid celebrations, and two main prayer grounds in
Jos where violence has previously occurred have been put off-limits,
with alternative areas provided.
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