23 killed in Chad suicide bombings blamed on Boko Haram

Security officers stand at the site of a suicide bombing in Ndjamena, Chad, June 15, 2015. Reuters Photo

Twenty-three people were killed and over 100 injured in twin suicide bombings targeting police in the Chadian capital June 15, with the government blaming Boko Haram militants for the bloodshed.

They were the first such attacks in the capital of the central African nation, which has been on the frontline of the regional fight against the Nigerian Islamist group.
 
"Boko Haram chose the wrong target. These lawless and faithless terrorists will be flushed out and neutralised wherever they are," the government said in a statement.
 
It said 23 people were killed and another 101 wounded in the simultaneous bombings outside the police headquarters and police academy in N'Djamena.
 
It said four "terrorists" were also killed, but did not give details. Earlier, a police official had told AFP that two suicide bombers carried out the attacks, which came as police cadets were attending a training course at the academy.
 
There was no immediate claim of responsibility but French President Francois Hollande also accused Boko Haram militants of being behind the "barbaric attack".
 
"There is no doubt that Boko Haram is responsible and will be brought to justice for this new humanitarian horror," Hollande said during a visit to Algiers where the regional threat posed by jihadists was high on the agenda.
 
Chad, a former French colony, is a close ally of France in its counter-terrorism Operation Barkhane in the Sahel region and the French army has set up its headquarters for the campaign in N'Djamena.
         
The Chadian government said the situation was quickly brought under control June 15, but the rare assault on the capital prompted the creation of a "crisis cell" and vehicles with darkened windows...

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