Daily Trust Saturday

Plateau: How to achieve peace – Makama

- Lami Sadiq, Jos

Twalking he gun men came from the hills, armed with guns and machetes under the cover of an afternoon rain. They split into groups and selected remote areas within

distances of between 40 and 50 minutes to unleash mayhem on innocent lives.

Before then, they had laid ambush on mourners returning from a funeral service in Kakuruk village and simultaneo­usly raided nearby villages, shooting, stabbing and maiming anyone at sight. Even the youthful and agile were helpless as the scoundrels massacred and soiled the land with tears and blood. Witnesses said the carnage lasted for hours and travellers evacuated their vehicles and fled into the bush.

The sporadic gunshots attracted security agents from the Forward Operation Base and the Strike Force Base in Gashish, but the killers were smart, as they systematic­ally arranged the multiple attacks to take place at the same time, thereby confusing security agents on the exact spots the gunshots were emanating. Survivors said they had been ambushed by gun wielding men they claimed were herders, and a security agent attached to the Operation Safe Haven told Daily Trust: “When we heard the gunshots coming from one of the communitie­s, our men quickly mobilised and rushed there but as we were repelling the attackers, other attacks were simultaneo­usly taking place in other villages of Gashish district.”

By Sunday morning, corpses had covered the 11 villages of Exland, Ruku, Gashish, Nghar, Kura Falls, Shonong and Kakuruk in Gashish district as well as Rakok, Kok and Razat villages in Ropp district, all in Barkin Ladi.

Twenty-year-old Esther Moses survived the attack on Exland and is still searching for her father and brother. Esther, whose grandmothe­r was killed in the farm, said she and dozens of others were protected by one Alhaji Babaji for almost three days.

Shortly before the attack, she said a presumed herder who killed her grandmothe­r was almost lynched but the Hausa and Fulani communitie­s in the area said he was innocent, adding that due to the tension, the police had moved the suspect to Barkin Ladi for interrogat­ion.

She said soon after that, dozens of gun wielding men dressed in black stormed the village, shooting and stabbing people.

“They killed so many people but a lot of us were hidden by our Hausa neighbour, Alhaji Babaji. We stayed in his house until Monday when soldiers arrived,” she said.

25-year-old Samuel Mareng, a mason from Gashish, said:

“They cannot speak Hausa or English, they marked houses and went in search of specific persons to kill and at the end of the attack they blew a horn before leaving, I don’t think they are Nigerians,” he said.

“We have about four to five security agents from Operation Safe Haven and they engaged the attackers in a gun battle but because the security men were few, they ran out of ammunition,” Mareng stated.

The mason who lost 12 members of his extended family told Daily Trust that he hid in a toilet but heard the cries and pleas of friends and relatives as the assailants hacked them to death.

“They hacked children, they burnt others in their homes, they were merciless,” said Anita Sunday who lived in Exland.

Anita who is also searching for her brothers and parents is presently taking refuge with a relative in Jos.

She added: “We had nowhere to go to, we were running then we saw one Alhaji Babaji took us in his car and he hid us in his house, we were over 50 and he hid us and gave us food before the security agents came and we were evacuated.”

The state police command had earlier given a death toll of 86 with six persons injured, 50 houses burnt while 15 motorcycle­s and two vehicles were burnt. However, two days later, Governor Simon Bako Lalong told President Muhammadu Buhari that the attackers left behind a trail of painful losses of over 200 people beside the humanitari­an challenges now confrontin­g thousands of displaced persons whose houses and crops were completely destroyed.

Our correspond­ent also gathered that there are over 35 victims presently receiving treatment at the Jos University Teaching Hospital (JUTH).

One of the victims with burns and bandages could not speak but a female nurse gave his name as John. She said he was admitted with machete cuts on his face and body as well as burns, adding that his relatives told the hospital that he was brought in from Kura falls in Gashish.

Angry youths block highways, attack commuters

As news and pictures of the gruesome killings trended on social media, tension escalated as angry youths around Heipang, Maraban Foron, Mararban Jama’a and Kuru areas of Barkin Ladi and Jos South LGAs blocked major highways and attacked and maimed travellers.

Most of their victims were those passing from Abuja, Bauchi and Kaduna states with over 21 persons killed and many others still missing.

Governor Lalong who rushed back to the state from the APC national convention tried to dismantle some of the road blocks himself but angry youths pelted his vehicle with objects and it took the interventi­on of security agents who allegedly shot at some of the youths to disperse them.

Lalong later warned that the blocking of roads and killing of innocent commuters would not be tolerated and that security operatives were to take drastic measures to ensure they apprehend any youth involved in the act.

With many travellers still missing and presumed dead, the corpse of five Fulani youths coming from Kanke, Pankshin and Mangu on their way to report at the Citizenshi­p and Leadership Training Centre, Shere Hills for the annual peace youth camp were recovered while the remaining three are yet to be found.

Sources from the non government­al organisati­on organising the youth camp told Daily

Trust that some of the children were the kids of the Ardo of Pankshin while others were from Mangu.

While condemning the recent attacks, a former Chairman of the National Population Commission and Chairman, Make Jos Great Again Forum, Chief Sumuila Makama, called for restraint, especially in making remarks on social media and urged the state government to intensify efforts to ensure that all the parties come to an agreement.

Sunday’s reprisal also claimed a member of staff of the Nigerian Communicat­ions Commission, Zayyanu Shallah, who was on his way to Abuja from Bauchi with his friend, Zayyanu Gwandu.

The Bukuru Muslim community also aided by the Muslim aid group and the Bukuru Police Divisional Officer (DPO) recovered additional eight corpses and buried them at the Dadin Kowa cemetery. The leader of the search and recovery mission, Alhaji Danlami Yaro, said they also identified the corpse of a police ASP, adding, “We identified him from the remains of his uniform and name tag.”

The driver of a lorry conveying bags of grains with his assistant were killed and the lorry which was packed full of bags of grains was set ablaze. Several other vehicles including a student bus of the Abubakar Tafawa Balewa University (ATBU) Teaching Hospital, Nigeria Union of Teachers, Nasarawa State and a campaign vehicle with the picture of the governor of Bauchi State were damaged.

Who did what?

The Berom and Fulani crisis in Plateau State has always been a major thorn in Governor Simon Bako Lalong’s flesh since he assumed office in 2015. The inherited hostilitie­s between the two ethnic groups went as far back as 10 years and above but the last major aggression between them was in late 2015 when isolated attacks and counter attacks erupted into a major violence that climaxed with the killing of over 20 persons in a remote village of Fan in Barkin Ladi LGA.

That attack also led to a reprisal on travellers along Barkin Ladi road even as Lalong constitute­d a 14-man committee made up of seven representa­tives from each of the groups to examine the causes of the conflicts as submitted by both ethnic groups and come up with modalities for a peaceful resolution.

Appropriat­e recommenda­tions were then made and both groups had signed a peace document that until recently was used as a model for other ethnic groups in the state.

Last Saturday’s gruesome attack is the worst in many years, and though it is not clear who steered the hornet’s nest, hostilitie­s between Berom and Fulani resurfaced about three months ago and gradually built up in June, taking the same pattern as in 2015.

 ?? Photos ?? One of the mass graves for the victims Lami Sadiq
Photos One of the mass graves for the victims Lami Sadiq

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