Boko Haram suspected of Chad bombings

At least 27 dead after two attacks in N’Djamena blamed on Nigerian group

Security officers stand at the site of a suicide bombing in Ndjamena, Chad. At least 27 people have been killed in two suspected attacks by Boko Haram in  Chad’s capital. Photograph: Moumine Ngarmbassa/Reuters
Security officers stand at the site of a suicide bombing in Ndjamena, Chad. At least 27 people have been killed in two suspected attacks by Boko Haram in Chad’s capital. Photograph: Moumine Ngarmbassa/Reuters

At least 27 people, including four suspected Boko Haram Islamist militants, were killed and 100 others injured in two attacks in Chad's capital, N'Djamena, which the government has blamed on the Nigerian militant group.

The attacks, which included at least one suicide bomb, are the first of their kind in Chad, an oil-producing nation and a major Western ally which has spearheaded offensives on al-Qaeda-linked groups in Mali and on Boko Haram in neighbouring Nigeria.

“Boko Haram is making a mistake by targeting Chad,” communications minister Hassan Sylla Bakari said on state television.

“These lawless terrorists will be chased out and neutralised wherever they are.”

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Bakari did not give further details but interior minister Abderahim Bireme Hamid told reporters earlier that there had been at least one suicide attack at police headquarters.

One witness at the central police station told reporters by telephone that he had seen three bodies on the ground.

Photos circulated on Twitter of several blood-stained bodies and damaged motorbikes reportedly used in the attack.

Chad’s soldiers

Chad has lost dozens of soldiers in conflicts in northern Mali and in northern Nigeria.

The first known attack by Boko Haram on Chadian soil took place in February on the shores of Lake Chad and has been followed by a handful of other isolated incidents.

However, despite threats by Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau to strike at Chad in retaliation for its leading role in a regional offensive against the group, N'Djamena had escaped attack so far.

The riverside city on the Cameroon border is the headquarters for a regional taskforce grouping troops from Nigeria, Chad, Niger, Cameroon and Benin to fight Boko Haram.

It also hosts Barkhane, a 3,000-strong French mission set up to fight terrorism across the Sahel-Sahara territorial band.

One foreign security source had earlier put the death toll at more than 40, saying that as many as 35 people were killed in two explosions at the police training school after an initial suicide bomb killed seven at a separate location.

The French foreign ministry condemned the incidents.

"France stands by Chad and its African partners in the fight against terrorism," spokesman Romain Nadal said.

Reuters