BREAKING: Three Huge Bomb Explosions Hit Maiduguri by

Three blasts hit the city of Maiduguri in

northeast Nigeria on Tuesday killing a number

of people, locals and the Red Cross said.

AFP reports that the "huge explosions"

happened in the Ajilari Cross area of the city,

which has been targeted by similar attacks

twice in the last month, including on

September 20 when 117 were killed.

The previous attacks were blamed on Boko

Haram, which has increasingly hit "soft"

civilian targets in recent months using

suicide bombers and improvised explosive

devices.

It was not immediately clear what caused the

latest blasts, which happened in quick

succession from 8:10 pm (1910 GMT), said

Bashir Mohammed, whose house is near the

scene.

"We are all confused and people are running

helter-skelter," he said.

Sheriff Ahmad, a cleric in the area, said:

"Many people have been killed. I don't know

how many and I don't think anyone can tell

you now."

Ahmad described seeing body parts on his

house, while Hafsat Sani, a nurse at the

nearby Umaru Shehu Hospital, said: "There

are many houses around the area and the

blasts have affected many of them."

The hospital quickly began receiving the

injured while police, soldiers, the Red Cross

and officials from Nigeria's National

Emergency Management Agency (NEMA)

were mobilised, he said.

A Red Cross official said: "Obviously there are

people that died but I don't have figures."

There was no immediate comment from the

police or military while details were sketchy

as Maiduguri is subject to a night-time

curfew.

On October 1, at least 10 people were killed

and 39 injured when four suicide bombers

blew themselves up in a wave of attacks in

Ajilari Cross, which is near Maidugiri airport

and a military base.

At least two bombs were strapped to teenage

girls, witnesses and the police said at the

time.

The September 20 attack targeted a mosque

and killed football fans watching a televised

match as well as bystanders.

Amnesty International said last month that the

Boko Haram conflict had killed at least 1,600

people since the start of June in Nigeria,

Niger, Chad and Cameroon and called for

more protection for civilians.

An AFP tally puts the death toll at more than

1,320 in Nigeria alone since Muhammadu

Buhari became president on May 29.