Sunday, 30 November 2014

Kano Blast Survivors: In God's House We Saw Hell

As the nation awakes from the ruins of the friday bomding, victims of the blast in kano have been recounting their experience of the sad day.

The Kano Central Mosque had been closed down for the first time in its 400 year old history .

Survivors of the disaster ranging from 13 to 70 years old have recounted their experience.

As they lay on their hospital beds suffering from various degree of pains and recounted their ordeals.

The Chief Imam of Masalacin Nakuka of Naibawa Quarters said that his 32-year-old son, Ahmadu Inuwa, and a neighbor, Malam Mai Tasi, “were seated two rows away from my position”.
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The revered cleric said: “I observed my Friday prayers at the city’s mosque” but said for two years now, “I had ceased going there until last Friday”.
“I got to the mosque early enough and sat beside some friends that I had always sat with inside the dome for five decades. We exchanged pleasantries, and I explained to them the reason for my absence in the last two years.
“Everything went on smoothly until about five seconds into the prayers when we had a deafening noise behind us followed by twin-blasts that occurred simultaneously right inside the mosque”.

“The Chief Imam, who led the aborted Jumat prayers, betrayed emotion after the first blast, and the twin blasts right inside the mosque because everyone, including the Chief Imam ran for dear lives”.
He explained: “You cannot believe it. While I made my way out of the chaos, I never knew that a six-year old boy who was perhaps caught in the madness tenaciously hung on to me until I got to a safe zone. It was hell inside there.
“How I escaped is still a subject of mystery, and it has also strengthened my faith that Allah is alive and in total control of events and happenings in this sinful world”.
Ahmad Inuwa, 32, narrated: “A large number of worshippers recovered from the initial shock of the blasts and stood their ground when it became obvious it was an attack; we needed to defend ourselves.
“I partook in the efforts to rescue the injured and remove the mangled bodies of children. I saw people’s bowels.

“I also saw how worshippers confronted the gunmen, picked them one after the other and set them alight.
One of the ironies was this young man I suspected should be in his mid-twenties who begged for mercy after he had killed innocent civilians.
“I lost my Muslim brothers, but the soothing thing was that all the five gunmen lost their lives, at least we have sent a message.”
Sani Abdulkadir told reporters: I came to the mosque a bit late, and walked into the confusion. While trying to escape I was hit by bullet directly on my chest and fell face flat on the ground but before hitting the ground, as I turned, another bullet hit me directed on my thigh.
“But I saw one of the gunmen clearly; he was on top of the perimeter fence of the mosque; he was a young man I suspect should be under 20years. This is all I could remember; I was told I went into coma and brought to hospital in a pool of blood”.
Kabiru Ibrahim said: “The blast sent him sprawling on the floor as he realised that blood was oozing out of his chest as a result of sharp objects that hit him.
“I hid among the dead to escape the gunman shooting sporadically from a height,”he said.
“The good thing was that angry worshipers took the bull by the horn and went after him and brought him to the ground and administered instant justice”.
“I saw hell; I sniffed death and slept among the dead in the house of God; but I remain grateful that I am alive to tell the story”.
13-year-old Farouk told his own story: “I was in the mosque with my elder brothers when the blasts occurred.
“I saw one of the suicide bombers alighting from a smoking Sienna van. A quarrel ensued between him and worshipers who surrounded him because they suspected that the way he waded dangerously through the crowd was unusual.

“The suicide bomber was also armed with a very big gun; but before I could make sense out of the developing event, I heard a deafening sound that sent me to the ground.
“It was later in hospital that doctors told me that I was brought in from the scene of the blasts in a pool of blood.
“I want you to tell the governor about my predicament. I was told that two pallets of bullet were lodged in my tummy and no one has done anything to remove them. I don’t want to die now; please tell the governor”.

He still doesn’t know the whereabout of his two junior brothers.

10-year old Yusuf Sada was shot on the chest and leg.
“I became unconscious; I was later conveyed to hospital”, he said.

6 year old Isa Muhammad is still in come in the hospital and his father told The Vanguard that theboy went to the mosque in company of his brother, adding, “My two other children returned home safely”.

Governor Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso of Kano State paid a visit to hospitals in kano yesterday, to encourage the health workers and the injured.

Source: Naij

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