Kano, Nigeria (CNN)Two
female suicide bombers between the ages of 17 and 20 blew themselves up
this week in a camp in northeastern Nigeria set up to shelter people
from terrorism, killing at least 58 people. But others were spared when a
third intended bomber realized at the last minute that her family had
taken shelter there, too, and refused to detonate her explosives, relief
officials said.
Officials said 78 people were injured. The victims were staying in a camp for people who had been displaced by Boko Haram violence in Nigeria's Borno state.
"There
were three female bombers who entered the camp around 6:30 a.m.
disguised as displaced persons," said Satomi Alhaji Ahmed, head of the
Borno State Emergency Management Agency. "Two of them set off their
explosives in the camp while the third refused after realizing her
parents and siblings were in the camp."
Two
other would-be bombers were also in the group but failed to set off
their explosives for unknown reasons, he added. They remain at large.
The bombers struck at the camp Tuesday, in the town of Dikwa, Ahmed said. Dikwa is near the border with Cameroon.
Warnings of more bombers on the way
The
suspect was injured in the attack and is now in custody, Ahmed said.
The woman confessed that she and the two bombers were sent by Boko
Haram, and she warned that more bombers were on the way, he added.
"She
told the military officers who interrogated her that they were among
several women detailed by Boko Haram to attack the camp," Ahmed said.
"She warned more attacks were underway as the female bombers would sneak
into the camp in different guises."
The
attacks are believed to be reprisals for a recent military offensive
against Boko Haram in its strongholds along the border with Cameroon, a
military source said.
Last week, troops
raided three Boko Haram strongholds, killing more than 100 fighters and
freeing more than 1,000 people -- including more than 100 women
kidnapped and used as sex slaves by the insurgents, the military source
said on condition of anonymity.
The
source said that the freed women were brought to the Dikwa camp and that
Boko Haram terrorists "are pained by that, and hence their decision to
send in suicide bombers in revenge."
Some
of the women in the group of suicide bombers are thought to have been
taken from villages by Boko Haram in previous raids and indoctrinated,
Ahmed said.
A growing legacy of terror and death
Boko
Haram is a militant Islamic group working in Nigeria and the border
areas of Chad and Cameroon; its purpose is to institute Sharia, or
Islamic law. Boko Haram militants live primarily in the northern states
of Nigeria, including Borno.
The group has provoked international condemnation with its brutality and mass kidnappings of women and girls.
On Saturday, militants from Boko Haram riding motorcycles at night killed 65 people in a raid.
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