MAIDUGURI // At least 22 people were killed – including the attackers – when four women blew themselves up in Umarari in north-east Nigeria on Friday.
It came just hours after at least 30 people were killed in a double bombing on a mosque in nearby Molai, the National Emergency Management Agency (Nema) said.
Twenty people were also wounded in the attack.
Locals, however, said the death toll was higher from both incidents and that more than 60 may have been killed in total.
Both areas are on the outskirts of the Borno state capital of Maiduguri, which has been increasingly targeted by coordinated bombing attacks in recent weeks.
Friday’s attack came as Nigeria’s most senior army officer told troops that “the next few days will be crucial” in Boko Haram’s counter-insurgency.
“Our sovereignty as a nation is threatened,” said chief of army staff Lieutenant General Tukur Buratai. “The Nigerian army and indeed the military as the symbol of our nationhood is being challenged.
“Our ability to stand and defeat the Boko Haram terrorists in the next few weeks will determine the future of our country. We cannot afford to lose the fight,” he added.
The greater sense of urgency may be attributed to fears of a resumption of attacks in hard-to-reach rural areas of north-east Nigeria once the rainy season ends.
Should that happen, troops attempting to secure towns and cities would face overstretch to tackle the militants in the countryside, which Boko Haram controlled last year.
However, a US presence in northern Cameroon could help boost intelligence efforts to thwart planned attacks across the Lake Chad region.
But the repeated attacks on Maiduguri have demonstrated the difficulties in combating the threat to urban areas.
In Molai, Nema and witnesses said Thursday’s bombers appeared to have slipped into the mosque disguised as worshippers before evening prayers at 6.30pm local time.
“When rescuers and sympathisers gathered in front of the place, the second one went off, killing many of them,” said Amadu Marte, a civilian vigilante assisting the army.
Mr Marte said that he and colleagues counted 42 bodies at the scene.
The attack in Umarari, a village of mainly poor farmers and labourers some seven kilometres west of Maiduguri, also struck a mosque.
Witness Dawud Baana said worshippers were preparing for morning prayers at the time.
Street vendor Saratu Garba said she heard the blast as she was carrying firewood out of her house and that 19 people were killed.
Boko Haram has a track record of attacking mosques, considering places of worship that do not share its radical interpretation of Islam as a legitimate target.
The attacks came just days after Nigeria’s president Muhammadu Buhari said he was “fully confident” of ending the six-year insurgency by the end of this year.
The military was “well-positioned to meet the December deadline which they have been given”, he said on Wednesday.
Boko Haram’s “ability to attack, seize, ravage and hold any Nigerian territory will have been completely obliterated” by December, he said.
But with Maiduguri having been attacked four times this month alone, fresh questions will be asked about security in the city, where Boko Haram was founded in 2002.
One area of the city, Ajilari Cross, has been hit three times in a month, killing more than 120. There have also been suicide attacks near the capital, Abuja.
Some 1,350 people have been killed since president Buhari came to power at the end of May.
Earlier in the week, Mr Buhari met the head of the US Africa Command, General David Rodriguez, as Washington announced the deployment of up to 300 military personnel to northern Cameroon.
The US military will provide intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance expertise, the White House said, after similar multiple suicide attacks in Cameroon, Chad and Niger.
Guerrilla-style tactics against “soft” civilian targets such as mosques, markets and bus stations have increased.
Last week, 41 people were killed in triple explosions in Baga Sola, on the Chadian side of Lake Chad, where Nigeria meets Niger, Chad and Cameroon.
* Associated Press, Agence France-Presse