At least 64 people died and an estimated 70 were injured when two 
female suicide bombers targeted an open air prayer ground in the capital
 of Yobe State in northeast Nigeria, as worshippers gathered to mark the
 end of the Ramadan fast.
 A Nigerian army spokesman informed local media that the blasts occurred
 at around 7.40am in the Gwange area of Damaturu, when an elderly woman 
and a girl aged around ten detonated devices at screening areas as 
people were being searched before entering the prayer ground.  
 Meanwhile, on 16 July, 50 people were killed and 58 injured in two 
explosions in a market in Gombe City, Gombe State. One was caused by a 
female suicide bomber; the other device had been planted in the market. 
The latest bombings have fueled debate on the merits of banning the 
hijab in Nigeria, as has occurred in Chad and northern Cameroon 
following suicide bombings in those countries. However, the country’s 
foremost Islamic organisation, Jama'atu Nasril Islam, has expressed 
opposition to a ban.
 While attacks by a resurgent Boko Haram have claimed at least 800 lives
 in northern Nigeria since President Buhari’s inauguration on 29 May, 
violence involving armed Fulani herdsmen has claimed around 500 lives in
 central Nigeria within a similar period, but continues to be 
overshadowed by the spike in Boko Haram’s activities. 
 During a meeting with the Plateau State Police Commissioner on 14 July,
 a delegation consisting of the North Central Leadership of the 
Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) and several Church leaders 
revealed that in the last two months over 264 people have been killed 
and many others displaced by armed attacks on communities in Riyom in 
Barkin Ladi Local Government Area (LGA). 
 Elsewhere, 5,000 members of the Tiv tribe protested outside government 
house in the capital of Taraba State on 15 July, carrying the mutilated 
bodies of two victims of the latest attack by Fulani gunmen. On 29 June,
 Nigerian media sources reported that fighting between Fulanis and Agatu
 tribesmen in Kogi State resulted in the loss of over 80 lives. On 26 
June, a police spokesperson reported that at least 96 people died in 
Benue State after several villages were attacked by armed Fulani 
herdsmen. 


 
 
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