“The US Mission in Nigeria advises that groups associated with terrorist activity might be planning attacks against hotels in Lagos frequented by international visitors, including those located on waterfronts, during the Eid-al-Fitr holidays,” it said on Tuesday.
Tuesday and Wednesday are public holidays in Nigeria and the traditional end of a month of fasting and prayer is marked by celebrations across the country. The US warning, posted on its embassy’s website, is unusually specific but not the first about possible attacks in locations frequented by expatriates.
A similar security warning was given in December last year, while in May 2014 diplomats warned of a possible attack at two Sheraton hotels in Lagos, after a car bombing in the capital, Abuja, killed 19 just days before a major economic summit. Similar warnings were given in April 2012 and November 2011 about hotels popular with Westerners in Abuja.
Lagos, a melting pot megacity of some 20 million people, has been spared the worst excesses of violence by the Islamist group Boko Haram, whose seven-year insurgency has destroyed Nigeria’s northeast. But the southwestern coastal city has been hit before. On June 25, 2014, explosions ripped through the port area near a major fuel depot.
The authorities blamed the blast on a cooking gas cylinder which exploded but eyewitnesses and Western diplomats said it was a car bomb that killed at least four people. Boko Haram’s shadowy leader Abubakar Shekau later claimed responsibility.
The US Embassy’s latest warning did not mention a specific group but urged its citizens to “review your personal security plans, remain aware of your surroundings, including local events, and monitor local news stations for updates.”
However, the Federal Government on Tuesday, declared Wednesday and Thursday public holidays to mark the eid-il-fitr.
Minister of Interior, Abdulrahman Dambazau in a statement issued in Abuja said this followed “the directive by the President General of the Nigerian Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs, Alhaji Sa’ad Abubakar III, the Sultan of Sokoto, to the effect that the Ramadan fast continues today (Tuesday) as a result of the non-sighting of the moon”.
Dambazau said the Federal Government has now declared Wednesday 6th and Thursday 7th July, 2016 as Public Holiday.
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Please Moon don't come out till next Monday next week, nonsense
ReplyDeleteNigerians will surely not stay in any hotel now. We don't take risks.
ReplyDeleteCalendar events uncertain. Salvation is uncertain or is it left to chance (paradise sai Mai sa'a)!
ReplyDeleteEverything about islam is uncertainty and violence. May God's grace open the eyes of adherents of that religion and bring them to repentance.
This religion Islam we shall see at the end if actually is of God but my Bible tells salvation comes only through Jesus Christ who started his message with peace . Our God is God of peace and anybody doing otherwise should tell us what he or she is worshipping.
ReplyDelete