Incident Summary:

02/02/2015: A female suicide bomber detonated at a campaign rally in Gombe city, Gombe state, Nigeria. The blast occurred minutes after President Goodluck Jonathan had left the stadium. In addition to the assailant, one person was killed and 18 people were injured in the explosion. No group claimed responsibility for the incident; however, sources suspected the involvement of Boko Haram.

GTD ID:
201502020051

When:
2015-02-02

Country:
Nigeria

Region:
Sub-Saharan Africa

Province/administrative
region/u.s. state:

Gombe

City:
Gombe

Attack Information
Type of Attack (more) Bombing/Explosion
Successful Attack? (more) Yes
Target Information (more)
Target Type: Government (General)
Name of Entity Government of Nigeria
Specific Description Campaign Rally for President: Goodluck Jonathan
Nationality of Target Nigeria
Additional Information
Hostages No
Ransom No
Property Damage Yes
Extent of Property Damage Minor (likely < $1 million)
Value of Property Damage Unknown
Weapon Information
Type Sub-type
Explosives Suicide (carried bodily by human being)
Additional Information
Suicide Attack?Yes
Part of Multiple Incident?No
Criterion 1 (more) Yes
Criterion 2 (more) Yes
Criterion 3 (more) Yes
Doubt Terrorism Proper (more) No
Additional Information One source stated that the civilian killed was actually another suicide bomber.
Perpetrator Group Information
Group Name Claimed Responsibility
Boko Haram (suspected) No
Perpetrator Statistics
Number of Perpetrators 1
Number of Captured Perpetrators 0
Casualty Information
Total Number of Casualties 2 Fatalities / 18 Injured
Total Number of Fatalities 2
Number of U.S. Fatalities 0
Number of Perpetrator Fatalities 1
Total Number of Injured 18
Number of U.S. Injured 0
Number of Perpetrators Injured 0
Sources
"Blast after presidential rally in NE Nigeria: witnesses," Agence France Presse -- English, February 2, 2015.
"Blast near stadium in Nigeria after President Jonathan speaks," CNN.com, February 2, 2015.
"Blast at Nigeria pro-Jonathan rally was female suicide bomber-police," Reuters Africa, February 3, 2015.