Families of some of the kidnapped girls and their supporters also planned to march today afternoon to the presidential villa in Abuja, the capital, to protest the failure to rescue the girls more than five weeks after they were captured. Outside the Aso Rock presidential complex, police in riot gear and fire engines with water cannon were waiting for the protesters.
"It's horrible," he said in front of the Jos University Teaching Hospital. "Many bodies are burned beyond recognition."
Traumatised family members at the morgue said they were trying to get police reports and hospital paperwork that would allow them to take the bodies of loved ones for burial.
That would make it the deadliest bombing yet committed by the Boko Haram extremists, though they have not claimed responsibility. The militants have claimed the mass abduction of more than 300 schoolgirls on April 15 whom they are threatening to sell into slavery. Fifty-three escaped on their own.
The school shutdown was organised by the Nigerian Union of Teachers, which said the extremists have killed 173 of its members in recent years. The union also railed against ongoing insecurity that has teachers as well as students going to schools filled with fear.
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