MAIDUGURI,
Nigeria (AP) -- An explosion that thundered across the city killed at least 11
people in Nigeria's northeastern city of Maiduguri on Wednesday, as a Nigerian
general took command of a multinational force fighting the extremist group Boko
Haram.
Panicked
soldiers fired into the air, witnesses said, adding to the fear and confusion
during the rush hour attack on Baga Road. The blast was followed by a blinding
sandstorm and then the first rains of the year, hampering rescue efforts.
Witness
Issa Audu said he counted 11 bodies before he fled.
Maiduguri,
the city where Boko Haram was created, has suffered daily attacks that have
killed more than 50 people since the weekend. They include suicide bombs,
planted bombs and rocket-propelled grenades fired into homes as people slept.
The
attacks started after newly inaugurated President Muhammadu Buhari announced on
Friday he is moving the command center for the fight against Boko Haram to
Maiduguri, at the heart of the war zone against Nigeria's home-grown Islamic
extremists.
Earlier
Wednesday, the defense ministry announced that Maj. Gen. Tukur Yusuf Buratai
has taken charge of the multinational force fighting Boko Haram. That takes the
lead role away from neighboring Chad.
The
Nigerian army "remains a virile fighting force ... capable of routing Boko
Haram," Buhari declared Wednesday on a visit to Niger, which is
contributing troops and hosting hundreds of thousands of Nigerian refugees from
the violence.
The
appointment came the day before he is scheduled to visit N'Djamena, the Chadian
capital that is the headquarters of the multinational force.
Before
his election, Buhari, a retired major general who was briefly a military dictator
in the 1980s, had said the presence of foreign troops on Nigerian soil was
"a national disgrace."
He has
promised to cooperate fully with Chad and Niger, which had complained that a
lack of cooperation was hampering the war.
Battle-hardened
Chadian troops took the lead in an offensive this year that drove Boko Haram
from northeastern towns where the extremist group had declared an Islamic
caliphate.

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