Monday, April 29, 2024

At least 140 villagers killed by suspected herders in dayslong attacks in north-central Nigeria



ABUJA – At least 140 other people have been killed by gunmen who attacked faraway villages over two days in north-central Nigeria’s Plateau state, survivors and officers mentioned Tuesday in the most recent of such mass killings this 12 months blamed at the West African country’s farmer-herder disaster.

The assailants focused 17 communities throughout the “senseless and unprovoked” attacks on Saturday and Sunday, throughout which maximum properties in the spaces have been burned down, Plateau Gov. Caleb Mutfwang mentioned Tuesday in a printed at the native Channels Television.

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“As I am talking to you, in Mangu local government alone, we buried 15 people. As of this morning, in Bokkos, we are counting not less than 100 corpses. I am yet to take stock of (the deaths in) Barkin Ladi,” Gov. Mutfwan mentioned. “It has been a very terrifying Christmas for us here in Plateau.”

Amnesty International Nigeria’s office told The Associated Press that it has so far confirmed 140 deaths in the Christian-dominated Bokkos and Barkin-Ladi local government areas of Plateau based on data compiled by its workers on the ground and from local officials, though locals feared a higher death toll with some people unaccounted for.

Some of the locals said that it took more than 12 hours before security agencies responded to their call for help, a claim the AP couldn’t independently verify, but which echoes past concerns about slow interventions in Nigeria‘s deadly security crisis, which has killed hundreds this year, including in Plateau.

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“I called security but they never came. The ambush started 6 in the evening but security reached our place by 7 in the morning,” mentioned Sunday Dawum, a adolescence chief in Bokkos. At least 27 other people have been killed in his village, Mbom Mbaru, together with his brother, he mentioned.

No group took responsibility for the attacks though the blame fell on herders from the Fulani tribe, who have been accused of carrying out such mass killings across the northwest and central regions where the decadeslong conflict over access to land and water has further worsened the sectarian division between Christians and Muslims in Africa’s most populous nation.

The Nigerian army said it has begun “clearance operations” in search of the suspects, with the help of other security agencies, although arrests are rare in such attacks.

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“We will not rest until we bring all those culpable for these dastardly acts to book,” said Abdullsalam Abubakar, who commands the army’s special intervention operation in Plateau and neighboring states.

Nigerian President Bola Tinubu, who was elected this year after promising to help tackle the security challenges that his predecessor failed to address, has yet to make any public comments about the latest attacks days after they happened.

Tinubu’s government and others in the past haven’t taken any “tangible action” to protect lives and ensure justice for victims in the conflict-hit northern region, Amnesty International Nigeria director Isa Sanusi told the AP.

“Sometimes they claim to make arrests but there is no proof they have done so … The brazen failure of the authorities to protect the people of Nigeria is gradually becoming the ‘norm,’” he mentioned.

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