Three children were killed and a teacher was injured when a man armed with a machete stormed a primary school in northeast Nigeria.
The attack happened at about 9 :30 am during break time at the Jafi Primary School in Kwaya Kusar, in the southwest of Borno state. Kasimu Ibrahim, who lives near the school , said the attacker described as being in his 30 s and with a neat beard headed to the nursery section of the school.
"He entered a class and began attacking pupils . He hacked two boys to death, aged about five and seven" he told AFP by telephone. A third victim an eight year old girl died on the way to a hospital in neighbouring Gombe state, he added.
The teacher managed to raise the alarm after she was struck in the hands and the attacker was overpowered. Habibu Suleiman, who also lives nearby and like Ibrahim rushed to the scene when the alarm was raised, gave a similar account. Both said police took the attacker into custody and then to a hospital, where he was under armed guard.
"Schools in the town have all closed, both public and private" said Suleiman. Kwaya Kusar is some 230 kilometres (150 miles) southwest of the Borno state capital, Maiduguri, which has been at the epicentre of Boko Haram ’s Islamist insurgency.
Ibrahim and Suleiman both blamed the jihadists but while Boko Haram has targeted schools before, Thursday's incident did not fit a pattern of previous attacks. Attacks on schools in the eight year conflict have typically involved large groups of fighters armed with automatic weapons and explosives.
Secondary schools have been the main targets . In February 2014, armed militants killed at least 43 students as they slept at a boys ’ boarding school in Buni Yadi , Yobe state. Boko Haram's name translates into English from the Hausa widely spoken across northern Nigeria to "Western education is sinful". The Jafi Primary School is a state run, secular school. There was no immediate comment from state police.