Details of the weekend bomb explosions in Maiduguri, Borno State
emerged yesterday as residents and rescue officials said at least 50
people died in the twin blasts while another 39 were killed in another
attack on Manoik, a village near the state capital by suspected Boko
Haram terrorists. Death toll may have risen to 100Twin blasts targeted
at a shopping centre and a viewing centre at Gomari-Bintu Sugar area of
Maiduguri occurred at about 6.05pm on Saturday.
Scores of football enthusiasts who were watching the evening English
Premier League matches were caught by the explosions believed to have
been hidden in a truck loaded with firewood and parked near the viewing
centre by the terrorists. The residents yesterday told the Deputy
Governor, Zannah Mustapha, during his visit that 46 people died on the
spot while over 60 injured persons were rushed to hospitals within the
metropolis. Hospital sources also said some of the victims later died
yesterday even as some were said to be in critical condition.
Mustapha expressed the sympathy of the governor and the government to
the people, adding that government would always identify with them in
their period of grief. He said the governor directed him to express his
condolence to the bereaved. He promised that government would assist the
victims and those whose shops were destroyed by the explosions to
assist them return to normal life. He directed the Chairman of Maiduguri
Metropolis Council (MMC) to compile a list of affected persons to help
government plan its palliative support for them.
The residents said they saw a truck loaded with firewood parked near
the shopping centre unknown to them that the vehicle was carrying bombs.
“We didn’t know it was going to be the source of our sorrow,” a
resident said amid tears. According to an account, two men reportedly
alighted from a truck loaded with firewood, “opened the vehicle bonnet as if trying to fixa fault”
and disappeared from the scene in a jiffy. “The truck exploded about 10
minutes later,” sources said. Some residents who were around the area
rushed to the scene ostensibly for rescue mission but the second bomb
went off immediately. “It was the second blast that killed many people
because those who moved toward the first scene were mostly affected,”
Aji Musa, a resident said.
The development prompted troops to launch stop and search operation
in the city early yesterday to track down possible movement of arms and
improvised explosive devices (IEDs) into the city. Many residents said
they were jolted by the discovery and return An official of the
National Emegency Management Agency (NEMA) said many people died and
injured but declined to give exact figure, insisting he is “not
authorized t do so.” He said both NEMA and Red Cross Society
collaborated with the police to rescue those suspected to have been
trapped. He, however, said no more corpses or victims were discovered in
yesterday’s rescue operation.
In another attack in Mainok, along Maiduguri Damaturu road, about 39
people died in the incident involving explosions and sporadic shooting,
security sources said. Mainok is about 55 kilomteres from Maiduguri. A resident, Mansur Buba, said gunmen suspected to be Boko
Haram laid a siege on the community at about 8pm. “We were still
discussing the bomb explosion in Maiduguri when we started hearing
gunshots and explosions everywhere. Almost all our houses have been
burnt. This morning (Sunday), we have recovered 39 bodies,” he said.
HANOI,
Vietnam: The young Vietnamese creator of hit mobile game Flappy Bird
has removed it from the App Store and Google Play saying it ruined his
life.
The game which was uploaded in 2013 but only surged to the top in downloads earlier this year was removed early Monday.
The success of the game that based its appeal on being simple and
also maddeningly difficult made its creator Nguyen Ha Dong, 29, a minor
celebrity.
The game was downloaded more than 50 million times on App Store
alone. In an interview with The Verge website, Dong said Flappy Bird
was making $50,000 a day in advertising revenue.
But tech blogger Carter Thomas said the sudden popularity of Flappy
Bird might have been due to use of fake accounts run by computers to
create downloads and reviews.
Thomas said he couldn't prove his suspicion and that the success of Flappy Bird might also be explained by it being "just a wildly viral game."
Dong, from Hanoi, wrote on Twitter on Saturday that the Internet sensation caused by the game "ruins my simple life" and he now hated it.
"I will take Flappy Bird down. I cannot take this anymore," he wrote.
Dong had agreed to talk to The Associated Press about the game in an interview scheduled for Friday, but canceled.
On Twitter he didn't address the inflated downloads allegation but
denied suggestions he was withdrawing the game because it breached
another game maker's copyright.
"It is not anything related to legal issues. I just cannot keep it anymore," he wrote.
I guess he could not take the publicity coming from the app he created, but the good news there, is that he still gets up to $50,000 a day in advertising revenue from the ones that have been downloaded........NAWA O if na Naija......d guy no go tink am at all........lol