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Two bomb blasts have rocked the outskirts of the Nigerian capital Abuja causing a number of deaths, officials say.
The first struck near a police station in Kuje, 25 miles (40km) from Abuja, the second hit a bus stop in Nyanya again.
No group has said it carried out the attacks yet but suspicion has fallen on Boko Haram Islamists.

While the militant group has attacked Abuja before, its insurgency has mostly focused on the north-east.
Maiduguri, the capital of Borno state, is where the militants first based its campaign to carve out an Islamist state in 2009.
Friday’s explosions in two suburbs of Abuja happened "almost simultaneously" at about 22:30 (21:30 GMT), a spokesman for the National Emergency Management Agency said.
"There are a number of dead but we can’t say anything about numbers now," Manzo Ezekiel said.
The explosives, he continued, appeared to be "the same kind of explosives used in the insurgency" in the north-east.

A bus station in Nyanya was struck by two blasts last year, killing 90 people
Two separate attacks at the same bus station in Nyanya killed 90 people last year.
Some 17,000 people are said to have been killed since Boko Haram began its insurgency and attacks by the group have intensified since Muhammadu Buhari became president in May, vowing to defeat the insurgents.
This year, security forces have managed to reclaim most of the territory captured by Boko Haram fighters and freed a number of people kidnapped by the militant group.

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