Gulf Times

Gunmen kill 20 in Nigeria market raid

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Gunmen from gangs of cattle thieves and kidnappers have opened fire on a market in northwest Nigeria, killing at least 20 people, officials and local residents said yesterday.

Northwest and central Nigeria are plagued by criminal gangs of cattle thieves and kidnappers for ransom called bandits, who raid villages, killing and abducting residents as well as looting and burning homes.

The gangs have been targeting schools where they abduct students.

Officials and locals said the gunmen raided a market in Unguwan Lalle village in Sabon Birni district of Sokoto state, near the border with Niger, on Friday.

Idriss Gobir, special adviser to the Sokoto police affairs minister, said the armed bandits rode on motorcycle­s and shot sporadical­ly, killing several people.

“The bandits in large numbers killed at least 20 people that we have seen and counted and set nine vehicles on fire,” he told Reuters by telephone.

Hussain Boza, a local member of parliament in Sokoto, blamed the attack on a lack of adequate security in the state.

“They attacked the market in the afternoon,” said Aminu al-Mustapha Gobir, a local lawmaker representi­ng the district in the Sokoto parliament.

Several people injured in the attack were taken to a hospital in Sabon Birni town, said Gobir, who attended the funeral of two of the victims in the state capital Sokoto.

One trader who escaped the attack, Abubakar Shehu, said around 20 people were killed and many others badly injured.

“They came around 3pm after everyone had returned from Friday prayers,” he said.

He said the attack could be a reprisal for the killing of 11 bandits by local vigilantes fighting the gangs at a market in nearby Mamande village on Thursday.

News of the killings was slow to emerge due to the shutdown of telecommun­ication services in the area.

For several weeks troops have been conducting air and ground operations on bandit camps in neighbouri­ng Zamfara state where authoritie­s have shut down telecom services to disrupt communicat­ion between the gangs.

Bandits fleeing the military operation in Zamfara have set up camps in Sabon Birni district from where they raid villages.

The influx of bandits from neighbouri­ng Zamfara state prompted authoritie­s in Sokoto to suspend weekly markets and shut down telecom towers in areas on the border with Zamfara, including Sabon Birni.

Sokoto state internal security commission­er Garba Moyi confirmed Friday’s attack, blaming non-observance of a government ban on weekly markets.

“We have observed noncomplia­nce with the suspension of markets in areas prone to bandits attacks including Sabon Birni,” Moyi said.

Last month 17 Nigerian security personnel were killed when gunmen raided their base in Sabon Birni’s Dama village which the military blamed on Islamic State-aligned militants.

Northweste­rn Nigeria has since last December witnessed a wave of kidnapping­s of school children and villagers for ransoms by bandits, disrupting everyday life for millions of citizens.

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