Kent Mensah, AfricaNews editor in Accra, Ghana
The bomb blast in the Warri city of the Delta State of Nigeria at a venue where an amnesty meeting was taking place has been officially confirmed. The Delta State commissioner for information, Oma Djebah, stated that the amnesty ceremony was been held for former rebel fighters.

Djebah claimed that the explosion went off in a car parked away from the venue. “Yes, there was an explosion about 200 meters away from the conference venue,” Djebah told NEXT.
It remains unclear if there were any casualties or injuries. The ceremony, a post-amnesty dialogue, organised by Vanguard Group of Newspapers, has however been put off until later in the day.
“The explosion happened while Sam Amuka-Pemu - the Vanguard Publisher - was giving his address after the chairman, Patrick Aziza, had given his opening remarks,” said a source who was at the conference.
However, the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND) said in an e-mailed statement to journalists that it had planted three explosive devices in and around Delta State Government House in Warri to debunk the state governor’s claim about MEND.
“After receiving the baton of ignorance from his Bayelsa State counterpart, the governor of Delta State declared in the Vanguard newspaper of February 22, 2010 that “the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND) is a media creation,” the statement said and promised that it would detonate the first bomb remotely at 11:30 hours Nigerian time which it did.
Warri is a major oil city in Delta State, Nigeria, with a population of over a million people within the Warri metropolis. The people of Warri are mainly the Urhobos, Itsekiris, and Ijaws, but other ethnic groups also live within the city. Warri is predominantly Christian, as is most of Southern Nigeria.