MAIDUGURI, Nigeria (Reuters) - Nigerian Islamist sect Boko Haram killed four people in an attack on a Sunday church service in the northeast town of Maiduguri, police said on Monday, adding to the death toll from a separate shooting in the country's second largest city Kano.
Gunmen killed at least 15 people and wounded many more at a Christian service in Kano on Sunday, the latest round of violence which has seen hundreds killed in the mostly-Muslim north of Nigeria this year.
No group took responsibility for either attack and it
was not clear if they were coordinated. But both strikes bore the
hallmarks of the Boko Haram sect, which has used bomb and gun attacks in
its push to carve out an Islamic state in Africa's most populous
nation."Boko Haram who were six in number came in a Volkswagen Golf car and shot the pastor and three others while they were about to administer the Holy Communion to worshippers," Maiduguri police spokesman Samuel Tizhe said.
Maiduguri is the capital of northeast Borno state, Boko Haram's home region and the location of the majority of its attacks, which mostly target the police and military but have also hit churches and drinking spots.
In the attack in
Kano on Sunday, gunmen arrived on motorbikes at a university lecture
theatre used for Christian services and threw small home made bombs into
the building before shooting fleeing worshippers. nL5E8FT05E
"President Goodluck Jonathan condemns the murderous terrorist attack on the Bayero University Campus
in Kano yesterday and the brutal killing of innocent worshippers at the
University by vicious assailants," a presidency statement said.
Jonathan has been
criticised by Nigerians and foreign diplomats for failing to get a grip
on the sect's wave of violence, which has gained momentum since his
presidential election victory a year ago.
Most of Boko
Haram's attacks focus on authority figures it believes have wronged the
group by arresting or killing its members.
Nigeria's more than
160 million population is split roughly equally between a largely
Christian south and a mostly Muslim north.
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