Monday, April 9, 2012

BOKA HAREM SHARE THEIR BROTHERLY LUV AGAIN...NIGERIA....09/04/2012

Motor taxis ride past damage houses following a bomb explosion in Kaduna, Nigeria, Monday, April 9, 2012. A suicide car bomb killed at least 38 people in Nigeria over the weekend, but the target is unclear as people from all sections of society were caught in the explosion.








A body is seen at the site of a bomb explosion at a road in Kaduna, Nigeria on Sunday, April 8, 2012. An explosion struck the city of Kaduna in central Nigeria on Sunday that has seen hundreds killed in religious and ethnic violence in recent years, causing unknown injuries as diplomats had warned of possible terrorist attacks over the Easter holiday, police said.







A man walk past a damaged car at the site of a bomb explosion at a road in Kaduna, Nigeria on Sunday, April 8, 2012. An explosion struck Kaduna, that has seen hundreds killed in religious and ethnic violence in recent years, causing unknown injuries as diplomats had warned of possible terrorist attacks over the Easter holiday, police said.







A man inspect a damaged house following a bomb explosion in Kaduna, Nigeria , Monday, April 9, 2012. A suicide car bomb that killed at least 38 people in Nigeria over the weekend affected Nigerians across religious and ethnic lines that divide this oil-rich nation. Witnesses in Kaduna told The Associated Press on Monday that those affected ranged from young Muslim men of the Hausa Fulani people who make their living driving motorcycle taxis, the Yoruba people of Nigeria's southwest and the Christian Igbo people of the southeast.







Soldiers look at burnt motorcycles off the street in the northern Nigerian cty of Kaduna after a car explosion killed at least 20 people on April 8, 2012, most of them commercial motorcyclists near a church. The explosion, a stark reminder of Christmas Day attacks that left dozens of people dead in Africa's most populous nation and largest oil producer, hit the city of Kaduna, a major cultural and economic centre in the north. Motorcycle taxi drivers and passers by appeared to have borne the brunt of the blast, and body parts littered the area.







People gather at the site of a bomb explosion at a road in Kaduna, Nigeria on Sunday, April 8, 2012. An explosion struck Kaduna that has seen hundreds killed in religious and ethnic violence in recent years, causing unknown injuries as diplomats had warned of possible terrorist attacks over the Easter holiday, police said.







A man stand in front of damaged house following a bomb explosion at a road in Kaduna, Nigeria on Sunday, April 8, 2012. An explosion struck Kaduna that has seen hundreds killed in religious and ethnic violence in recent years, causing unknown injuries as diplomats had warned of possible terrorist attacks over the Easter holiday, police said.






Security personnel inspect the mangled remains of bomb-laden car that exploded Sunday, April 8, 2012 along junction Road in northern Nigerian cty of Kaduna, killing at least 20 people, most of them commercial motorcyclists near a church. The explosion, a stark reminder of Christmas Day attacks that left dozens of people dead in Africa's most populous nation and largest oil producer, hit the city of Kaduna, a major cultural and economic centre in the north. Motorcycle taxi drivers and passers by appeared to have borne the brunt of the blast, and body parts littered the area.







People gather to look at the damage cause by an bomb explosion in Kaduna, Nigeria, Monday, April 9, 2012. A suicide car bomb that killed at least 38 people in Nigeria over the weekend although the target of the explosion is unclear as people from all sections of society were caught in the explosion.







A woman stands at the scene of a bomb explosion in Kaduna, Nigeria, Monday, April 9, 2012. The weekend explosion killed at least 38 people and the target for the blast seems unclear as people from all sections of society were caught in the explosion.






People gathered around the wreckage of a damaged road side tea shop following an explosion in Kaduna, Nigeria Monday, April 9, 2012. A suicide car bomb that killed at least 38 people in Nigeria over the weekend affected Nigerians across religious and ethnic lines that divide this oil-rich nation. Witnesses in Kaduna told The Associated Press on Monday that those affected ranged from young Muslim men of the Hausa Fulani people who make their living driving motorcycle taxis, the Yoruba people of Nigeria's southwest and the Christian Igbo people of the southeast.







People look at a damaged house following an explosion in Kaduna, Nigeria, Monday, April 9, 2012. A Sunday suicide car bomb that killed at least 38 people in Nigeria over the weekend affected Nigerians across religious and ethnic lines that divide this oil-rich nation. Witnesses in Kaduna told The Associated Press on Monday that those affected ranged from young Muslim men of the Hausa Fulani people who make their living driving motorcycle taxis, the Yoruba people of Nigeria's southwest and the Christian Igbo people of the southeast.







GRAPHIC CONTENT People evacuate a victim after an explosion in Kaduna on April 8, 2012. A car bomb blast outside a church in northern Nigeria on Easter Sunday killed at least 20 people and put the country on alert over fears of further attacks, rescue officials and residents said. The explosion, a stark reminder of Christmas Day attacks that left dozens of people dead in Africa's most populous nation and largest oil producer, hit the city of Kaduna, a major cultural and economic centre in the north. Motorcycle taxi drivers and passers-by caught much of the blast.

















































































































































































































































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