Nigeria | More than 160 people killed in attacks by armed groups

(Bokkos) At least 160 people were killed in attacks by armed groups between Saturday evening and Monday in several villages in Plateau State, in central Nigeria, local authorities announced on Monday.




“The hostilities started on Saturday continued Monday morning,” declared Monday Kassah, the president of the government council of Bokkos, a constituency located in this region plagued for several years by religious and ethnic tensions.

“At least 113 bodies have been found,” he added.

And “more than 300 people” were injured and transferred to hospitals in Bokkos, Jos and Barkin Ladi, said Monday Kassah.

A first provisional report from the local Red Cross sent to AFP on Monday evening reported 104 deaths in 18 villages in the Bokkos region.

Armed groups, whose members are locally described as “bandits”, attacked “no less than 20 villages”, burning numerous houses, between Saturday evening and Monday morning, said Mr. Kassah, according to whom “the attacks were well contact details “.

In addition to these 113 deaths in the Bokkos constituency, there are “at least 50 people killed” in four villages in the neighboring Barkin Ladi constituency, according to Dickson Chollom, an elected official in the local assembly.

“Merchants of Death”

“We will not succumb to the methods of these merchants of death, we are united in our desire for peace and justice,” he declared.

“We were sleeping at night when suddenly gunshots rang out. We were afraid, we did not expect an attack,” said Markus Amorudu, a resident of the village of Mushu, who was targeted during the night from Saturday to Sunday.

“People hid, but the attackers captured many of us, some were killed, others were injured,” he added.

On Sunday, the governor of Plateau State, Caleb Mutfwang, described this armed action as “barbaric, brutal and unjustified”.

“Proactive measures will be taken by the government to curb the ongoing attacks against innocent citizens,” promised Gyang Bere, the governor’s spokesperson.

Pistol fire could still be heard late Monday afternoon, a local source said, contradicting army statements that “the situation was brought under control” on Sunday.

Requested by AFP on Monday, the police did not respond.

The NGO Amnesty International reacted to this violence on its X account, judging that “the Nigerian authorities have always failed in their attempts to put an end to these frequent attacks in Plateau State”.

The populations of the northwestern and central regions of Nigeria live in terror of attacks by jihadist groups and criminal gangs who pillage villages and kill or kidnap their inhabitants.

For years, a bitter competition has raged between transhumant herders and sedentary farmers for natural resources in central and north-western Nigeria, with the latter accusing the former of ransacking their land with their livestock.

Aggravated by climate change and the demographic explosion in this country of 215 million inhabitants, sporadic violence has led to a serious security crisis, between attacks by heavily armed bandits and endless reprisals between communities, but also humanitarian.

The new Nigerian president, Bola Ahmed Tinubu, who took office last May, has made the fight against insecurity one of the priorities of his mandate.


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