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NEWS EXPRESS is Nigeria’s leading online newspaper. Published by Africa’s international award-winning journalist, Mr. Isaac Umunna, NEWS EXPRESS is Nigeria’s first truly professional online daily newspaper. It is published from Lagos, Nigeria’s economic and media hub, and has a provision for occasional special print editions. Thanks to our vast network of sources and dedicated team of professional journalists and contributors spread across Nigeria and overseas, NEWS EXPRESS has become synonymous with newsbreaks and exclusive stories from around the world.

A victim of the last lying on hospital bed
Monday’s explosion in in Borno State was not the handiwork of terrorists as earlier feared but was caused by a grenade that a child picked up from a bin on the Nigeria-Cameroon border that exploded. Meanwhile, the death toll was not 30 but nine – the boy in question and eight others.
Twenty-six people were also wounded in the blast on the Nigerian side of the border, a Cameroonian official said, according to a BBC report.
The child, believed to be under 10, mistook the grenade for scrap metal which he intended to sell, witnesses said.
It is unclear who left the grenade in the bin, but the area has been hit by an Islamist insurgency.
Boko Haram and its splinter faction, the Islamic State West Africa Province, operate in the region.
Nigerian and Cameroonian troops form part of a regional force fighting the militants.
The governor of Cameroon's Far North Region, Midjinyawa Bakary, told the BBC that the grenade exploded late on Monday on a busy bridge linking the Nigerian town of Gamborou to the Cameroonian town of Fotokol.
All the dead were Nigerians, while the wounded included nationals from both countries, he said.
The injured were taken to a local hospital - some had their limbs blown off, residents in Gamborou told the BBC.
Many poor children in Nigeria often go through bins, looking for scrap metal which they sell to metal dealers to recycle, says the BBC Nigeria reporter Ishaq Khalid.
Boko Haram’s decade-long insurgency began in north-eastern Nigeria but has spilled over into neighbouring states.
Tens of thousands of civilians have been killed and more than two million have been displaced in the conflict.


