Bombers Attack Center in Christian Area of Jos, Nigeria
 
Suspected Islamic extremists throw explosive, injuring at least four.
JOS, Nigeria, April 25 (CDN) — One  person was killed and nine others were injured last night after  suspected Islamic extremists attacked a TV viewing center in a Christian  area of Jos where a crowd had gathered to watch soccer. 
  
 At  about 10:15 p.m. at the viewing center, one of many such establishments  popular in Nigeria for watching soccer matches, the attackers drove  past the site and threw an explosive device at hundreds of Christians  watching the match, eyewitnesses told Compass. 
  
 Some 10  minutes after the bombing, security agents evacuated the injured to  Janvak Hospital just a few meters away. Medical personnel at the  hospital were treating four of them under strict supervision of police  and other security agents. Plateau state spokesman Pam Ayuba reportedly  said one person died in the blast.
 
 
 Soldiers and police  under the Joint Military Task Force charged with keeping peace in  embattled Plateau state cordoned off the area around the establishment.  Authorities have not ruled out members of the Islamic sect Boko Haram as  suspects.
  
 The bombing marks the second time in two weeks  that the Christian area has been attacked. Boko Haram, which seeks to  impose a strict version of sharia (Islamic law) throughout  Nigeria, was suspected of a detonating a bomb a few meters from the  center during Easter celebrations that injured five Christians. Various  churches in Tudun Wada, Jos, commonly use the site as a base for  evangelistic campaigns aimed at social venues in the area.
  
 Christian and Muslim communities live in close but separate quarters of  the Tudun Wada area of Jos, and the attacks have heightened tensions  between them. The area comprises eight churches – Evangelical Church  Winning All (ECWA) Bishara 2, Angwan Yashi, ECWA Good News Church,  Assemblies of God Church, Redeemed Peoples Mission, Solid Rock Church,  Deeper Life Bible Church, and Christ Way Baptist Church.
  
 Suspected Islamic extremists bombed three TV viewing centers in  Christian areas near Jos on Dec. 10, 2011. A few minutes into soccer  match televised at Yangwava Television Viewing Center at Ukadum village,  a bomb went off, killing 31-year-old Joshua Dabo. 
  
 During  the same game, bombs exploded at two other viewing centers in  predominantly Christian areas of Jos, injuring at least 10 others,  including four in critical condition and two in a coma (see “Christian  Areas of Jos, Nigeria Bombed, Killing One,” Dec. 15.)
  
 Plateau state, in central Nigeria, has been especially volatile recently  as it lies between the country’s predominantly Muslim north and  Christian south. Nigeria’s population of more than 158.2 million is  divided between Christians, who make up 51.3 percent of the population,  and Muslims, who account for 45 percent. The percentages may be less,  however, as those practicing indigenous religions may be as high as 10  percent of the total population, according to Operation World.