At least 35 people are dead and as many wounded in an attack on a mosque in northern Nigeria as worshippers were attending Friday prayers.
The BBC says three explosions were reported at the mosque in Kano, and that the attackers also turned gunfire on the worshippers.
"These people have bombed the mosque. I am face to face with people screaming," Chijjani Usman, a local reporter who had gone to the mosque in the old city for prayers himself, was quoted by Reuters as saying.
Authorities tell Reuters that the attack, using guns and bombs, carries the hallmark of the Boko Haram militant group.
According to Reuters:
"The mosque is adjacent to the palace of the emir of Kano, the second highest Islamic authority in the country, although the emir himself, former central bank governor Lamido Sanusi, was not present at the time. "A police spokesman in Kano declined to make any immediate comment. There was also no immediate claim of responsibility, but suspicion is likely to fall on Boko Haram, which has for five years waged a campaign to revive a medieval Islamic caliphate governed by sharia law."
NPR's Ofeibea Quist-Arcton reports that the attack follows a roadside bomb also blamed on Islamist extremists.
The earlier incident occurred near a village just outside Mubi near Nigeria's border with Cameroon.
Copyright 2014 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.