Monday 26 December 2016

This is a new pogrom! The massacre of Biafrans have intensified: Over 200 dead in Nyanya bomb attack. Details of the Nyanya attack


·         About 200 predominantly Biafrans dead
·         More than 400 hundred injured
·         16 luxury buses and 24 other vehicles burnt by explosion
·         Eye-witnesses, survivors recount experiences
·         Jonathan makes another empty boast “We’ll defeat Boko Haram
·         Survivors’ accounts confirms mainly Biafrans were killed in the blast
A new pogrom against Biafrans has once again began. The pogrom was intensified with yesterday bombing at Nyanya Motor, which targeted Biafrans. Biafrans predominate in Nyanya, a suburb of the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja and for the attack to have been carried out at the rush hour of the morning when people are leaving for work and private endeavour. It should be recalled that from  May 1966 till after July, the Islamic northern oligarchy carried out murderous acts against Biafrans, which culminated in the Biafran-Nigeria war.

They are at it again!
Yesterday, agents of the Islamic Republic of Northern Nigeria carried out a dastardly act against Biafrans, in an obvious act of war.  Innocent and defenceless Biafrans were mutilated!  Although official report is putting casualty figure at 88 dead and 243 injured The Biafran estimates from eyewitness accounts puts it at over 200 dead and more than 400 sustained various degrees of injuries, with over 40 vehicles destroyed.
 Some of the dead were burnt beyond recognition, while others were blown into pieces as only their severed parts were packed into bags by rescue workers.

The park was filled with wailing. Babies agonisingly screaming “Mummy, mummy, don’t let me die!” Heart-rending cry of a 15-year-old boy, whose legs were shattered and holding on to his mother trailed the deafening bomb explosion reverberating through the Federal Capital City. In another corner, a woman was lying face down without limbs while another who was surrounded by her children, struggled for life before giving up in their arms.  Several other corpses littered the ground in the midst of the injured, following the massive bomb blast that rocked the crowded Nyanya Bus Terminus, at 6.45 am yesterday
The incident happened at a peak period when the park is filled commuters. The bus station serves as a major terminus for commuters coming Nyanya and other satellite towns heading to the city centre.
Mr Romanus Ugwu, an Abuja-based journalist, resident at Nyanya, said that he ran to the scene on hearing the blast.
Ugwu said what he saw could be best described as a “gory sight” because many people were burning in some cars and were calling for help that never came to them while some were on the ground, helpless without limbs.
“You have to be hard hearted to look at these things. I saw a woman lying face down without limbs while one, who was surrounded by her children, struggled for life and gave up in their arms.
“These attackers appear to be more proactive than our rescue organisations and security agencies because so many lives would have been saved if help had come in time.’’
Ugwu said he counted many bodies littered on the ground in the park, but could not say if all of them were dead.
How the bomb was planted
According to eye witnesses, a man drove a red Volkswagen space bus into the premises of the big capacity bus terminus popularly called El Rufai Buses and parked in front of two of the buses which were loaded with passengers and almost moving to the city centre.
Upon protest from drivers of the buses that he was obstructing their exit, the driver allegedly came out with four other passengers saying he was going to get some lower denominations of money to settle his ‘passengers’.
About five minutes after the driver and the passengers left the Volkswagen bus, it exploded, killing everyone near it.
At the scene of the blast, a pack of popular  Igbo delicacy, Okpa, whose owner was reportedly ripped into two was still intact, unaffected by the blast. Piles of bags of intending passengers were scattered as far as over 30 metres.  In the midst of concerted rescue efforts, mobile phones of  some of the passengers who either died or sustained injuries from the blast were still heard ringing.
Survivors’ accounts confirms mainly Biafrans were killed in the blast
One of the victims admitted at the Wuse General Hospital who gave his name as Cosmas Ugwuanyi from Enugu State told Vanguard that he was on queue to enter the El-Rufai bus when the blast occurred. Though, Mr. Ugwuanyi’s case was not so critical, the blast affected his eardrum and he was having difficulties hearing what people were saying.
Another survivor of the blast who miraculously escaped unscathed, said his survival without a scratch was because of providence.
The victim, who was still in shock as at the time he was responding to questions said he was grateful to God for being gracious to him.
Narrating what he witnessed, the victim who wouldn’t mention his name said: “I went to Nyanya to pick my friends. I was under the Nyanya Bridge to pick them, one person sat with me in the front, while the other three people sat at the back. I had to enter the Park to pick them because the Task Force would not allow people to pick passengers under the Bridge.
“We all saw the commotion that was happening as a car drove into the park and the people were complaining about the driver. The last person entering my car shut the door and I tried to move the car and everything went blank. The explosion threw me far away and scattered my car while all the four people with me in the car died.
“I really can’t say what happened, I just saw myself here, they kept me on a wheel chair, but I got up to call my people.”
In the same vein another Biafran eye witness, Michael Chuks said: “Our vehicle just left the park and we have not even left that junction close to the park when we heard loud noise, some people said it was a burst tyre but we knew that the noise was more than burst tyre so we parked and the next we saw were plenty of dead bodies on ground. “The blast affected more than four el-Rufai buses already loaded with passengers. There were more than 500 people. Very soon now the government will tell us that two or three people died.”
Narrating his ordeal, a survivor, James Igwe (another Biafran) said a driver drove into the park and parked in front of the already loaded high capacity buses and disappeared before the explosion.
According to him: “A vehicle came in and parked and the driver disappeared from the vehicle, there were many people inside all those long buses you are seeing now, this bomb exploded and everybody was running, some people were seriously injured and we were calling for help but nobody came, because some people were still unconscious and they were on the  ground.
A food vendor who identified herself as Chinenye Emeka (Biafran), was grateful to God for sparing her life as the explosion occurred immediately she stepped outside her shop and walked across the road to buy polythene bags with which to sell her snacks.
She, however, regretted that many other food vendors at the park died in the explosion.
She stated i her account: “The vehicle just drove in at a point where two “El-Rufai” buses which were full of passengers were about moving while many passengers were on queue struggling to board other vehicles.

“I saw a red-coloured space wagon going inside the park as I was trying to cross the road back to where I kept my bread and other things which I sell but while waiting to make sure there was no traffic on the road before I crossed over, I heard a loud sound. I fell down but by the time I got up, there was thick smoke all over the place. I tried running but I couldn’t and when the smoke could clear a bit, I saw many people lying down dead while many vehicles were already on fire”.
Another  Biafran survivor of the blast Jeremiah Ofem, a civil servant had bruises but survived.
Displaying his bruised body to Vanguard, Ofem insisted: “Those who planted the vehicle may have driven it to the place earlier and left. I believe they detonated the bomb through the use of a remote control as no one was inside the vehicle.”
Timothy Eze Okorie (Biafran) was grateful for his decision yesterday to buy a bottle of a local alcoholic bitters popular with artisans and commercial vehicle drivers across the country before beginning his job as a commercial bus driver.
Narrating his experience to Vanguard at the scene of the incidence, Mr. Okorie who was visibly shaken said he could not explain why he took the decision to buy the bitters rather than go back to Masaka to bring back passengers to the bus terminus when the bomb blast took place.
According to him, ‘I left my House at about six in the morning to bring passengers from Masaka, Mararaba, One Man Village and Ado to the Nyanya bus Terminus where they will board El-Rufai bus to the city centre. I dropped the last passenger under the Nyanya Bridge and was supposed to enter the park to carry passengers back to Masaka. Strangely, I had this sudden and strong feeling to drink before beginning the day’s job. So rather than enter the park, I took the next turn, went round the bridge and headed towards Jukwoyi to buy a bottle of Alomo”.
That decision turned out to be his saving grace as less than three minutes after he left the bus park, the huge explosion  occured.
“What will I tell our parents?” cries another Biafran Francis Alozie, who lost a cousin, Chinyere Edozie.
“My sister, Miriam Edozie Chinyere, left this early around 6.30 in the morning to catch up with their staff bus which normally waits for them at Nyanya Bridge.
Unfortunately, when I heard about this bomb issue I tried calling her but her number was not going through, all the two numbers were switched off. And it is not as if the battery was down because I was the one that charged the battery of the two phones for her. She is my cousin, we live together at Kurudu, she works at the Airport.
“I went to Nyanya Hospital first and they said that only one female patient was kept there. They said they had the list where all female patients were compiled.
I tried to see the names and I did not see anywhere they listed names and here too I did not see any names I am just confused. I don’t know what to do. If our parents start calling now, what will I tell them?
Other victims are collateral damage
One of the survivors, who identified himself as Yaro Inusa Abdulahi, an Okada rider from Kano State, said, the blast occurred when he was trying to cross the road to see somebody when he heard a blast.
Abdulahi, who lives at national headquarters lodge, Karu, said: “I heard a big blast and fainted, when I opened my eyes, I saw wounds all over my hands, legs and head. About five El-Rufai buses were loading at the scene of the incident.”
Another victim who spoke to our reporter, Daniel Job, who lives in Mararaba said: “I came with my brother to board a bus to town, and because there was no motor from Mararaba to town, I decided to enter a bike from Maraba to Nyanya, so that we could board a bus to town. After buying the ticket at Nyanya motor park, I discovered that the first bus had got filled up and we were asked to enter the second one, on our way to enter the next bus, that was when I heard the bomb explosion.
After the explosion, I discovered that I just had a little injury and started looking for my brother and sister, who were already inside the bus I missed.”

Another victim, Mr. Adeoye Busayo, 40 year-old  security consultant at a private security firm in Abuja, said he left his house around 6.00 am with “my Nissan sunny car with some people I wanted to give a lift.
“When we got to Nyanya around 6:30 am, there was a little traffic between Skakoma and the check point. I was about 30 to 40 meters to Nyanya park; all of a sudden, I heard a terrible blast, and there was dust everywhere, people were running helter skelter. Everybody was panicking, though the sound was very terrifying, after the first blast, all my windscreen and side glasses were already shattered because of the vibration.
“Then I heard another blast. This time, I just heard a terrible noise at the roof of my car; I managed to escape through the window because the door could not open. I over-heard the people in my car shouting help, help and blood was gushing out of their bodies.
“At this point, the weather became dark because there was durst everywhere. We started running and I saw a lady fail down from my car after struggling to get out of the car through the back glass and fire from the car at my back caught her.
“Everybody behind me all left their cars and ran  away, instead of people running for safety, because you could neither see your back nor your front, they ran to where the fire was raging because it was only that direction of the fire that  was a little bit illuminated, that was what deceived a lot of people.”



Published on 15/04/2014 22:50 Greenwich Mean Timet

No comments:

Post a Comment