A
man suspected of being behind the manufacture of explosives used in a
series of Boko Haram suicide attacks has been arrested in northeast
Nigeria, a senior police officer told AFP on Tuesday.
The
man, identified only as Ba’na, was held in the Arikime area of Potiskum
after several weeks of surveillance, said the officer, who was involved
in the Sunday arrest.
Potiskum, the commercial
capital of Yobe State, has been hit by a wave of bombings in recent
months, including a suicide attack on a secondary school in November 10
in which 58 people were killed.
On January 18, at least four
people died in an attack on a bus station, while the previous weekend
two women wearing suicide vests killed six people at a market and two
died in a car bombing outside a police station.
The police
officer, who asked not to be identified because he is not authorised to
speak to the media, said Ba’na was in his mid-thirties and had admitted
making the bombs.
“He confessed to being responsible for the
manufacture of the explosives used in at least three suicide attacks and
the car explosion outside the divisional police station,” he added.
Nine alleged accomplices were also arrested in a hideout in the town hours after Ba’na’s arrest.
Ba’na
allegedly made the explosives used in the November school attack, the
January 10 car bombing and January 11 market blasts, the source said.
He
was said to have moved to Potiskum from the state capital Damaturu
three years ago and worked as a stonemason and water vendor before
getting married.
“He was quite good at his disguise and his mason and water vending jobs gave him perfect cover,” the officer said.
Credit: PM News
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