Lagos - Nigerian troops have arrested a suspect in the
Christmas Day bombings that killed at least 44 people, state television
reported, as Washington put three Boko Haram leaders on its global terror list.
In the northern State of Kaduna meanwhile, the authorities
said late on Thursday they had relaxed a 24-hour curfew imposed following
clashes that have left scores dead since the weekend.
Suspect Habibu Bama was arrested in Damaturu, the capital of
Yobe State, following a shoot-out with the military joint task force, the
Nigerian Television Authority (NTA) reported.
Security sources said he had been shot and wounded.
Bama, a suspected member of Islamist group Boko Haram, had
been wanted in connection with the deadly Christmas attack on a church in
Madalla, near Abuja, that killed at least 44 people.
Fresh clashes
Nigerian security forces meanwhile restored calm in Kaduna
state, after fresh clashes had rocked an area already under curfew following
days of violence that have so far killed at least 106 people.
Clashes between Christians and Muslims late on Wednesday had
erupted in areas in and around the city of Kaduna, leaving at least five people
dead, according to residents.
"The clashes started from unfounded rumours being
bandied about on text messages of attacks and counter-attacks in the city,
which provoked so much sentiment," said police spokesperson Aminu Lawan.
Kaduna state, where the violence began on Sunday, had been
under a round-the-clock curfew as troops and police patrolled the area.
But officials said late on Thursday that from Friday this
would to be lifted between noon (11:00 GMT) and 16:00.
Government officials were said to be consulting with
religious leaders in Kaduna in an effort to ease tensions.
"We are talking both of conventional law enforcement
strategies as well as what I would call a soft approach to conflict
resolution," said national police spokesperson Frank Mba.
Kaduna city, the capital of the state of the same name, is a
major city in Nigeria's mainly Muslim north and has a large Christian
population.
'Global terrorist'
The United States meanwhile said it had designated the head
of the main branch of Nigerian Islamist group Boko Haram a "global
terrorist" along with two others tied to both Boko Haram and al-Qaeda's
north African branch.
But officials stopped short of designating Boko Haram itself
as a terrorist group.
The three designated members are Abubakar Shekau - widely
believed to lead Boko Haram's main Islamist cell - Abubakar Adam Kambar and
Khalid al-Barnawi, alleged to have links to both Boko Haram and al-Qaeda in the
Islamic Maghreb.
The US designation freezes any US assets they may have and
bars US citizens from "engaging in transactions with or for the benefit of
these individuals," a statement said.
The violence in Kaduna state began on Sunday with suicide
attacks at three churches that killed at least 16 people and sparked reprisals
by Christian mobs, who burned mosques and killing dozens of Muslims.
Boko Haram claimed responsibility for the church attacks.
The group has been blamed for bomb and gun attacks, mainly in
Nigeria's northeast, that have claimed more than 1 000 lives since mid-2009.
It claimed responsibility for last August's suicide attack on
UN headquarters in Abuja that killed 25 people, as well as a suicide attack on
the Abuja office of one of the country's most prominent newspapers.
This latest surge in violence has sparked fears of further
reprisals and wider conflict in the country of some 160 million people, roughly
divided between a mainly Muslim north and predominantly Christian south.
Boko Haram has killed more than 1 000 people in Africa's most
populous country and largest oil producer since mid-2009.