Texarkana Gazette

At least 80 people killed in Nigeria attack

Police arrested seven

- CHINEDU ASADU

ABUJA, Nigeria — The death toll from an attack by dozens of gunmen in north central Nigeria’s Plateau state has reached 80, local authoritie­s said Thursday, with survivors still searching for bodies days after the incident.

The gunmen targeted several villages in the remote Mangu district of Plateau during the attack that started Monday and lasted till Tuesday, according to residents. Burials continued on Thursday in parts of Mangu located 60 kilometers (37 miles) from Jos, the state capital.

The police told The Associated Press seven suspects had been arrested. It was a “situation of sporadic shooting across a vast area of different villages,” said Alabo Alfred, the command spokesman.

The security crisis in the northwest and central regions of the country has stifled Nigeria’s developmen­t, despite its status as Africa’s largest economy and one of its top oil producers.

After decades of conflict, current and former pastoralis­ts from the Fulani tribe took up arms against farmers over limited access to land and water. The attacks are sometimes reprisals and are mostly in remote areas where security forces are outnumbere­d and outgunned.

As of Thursday, families in Plateau’s Mangu district are unable to retrieve the bodies of victims in areas that remained volatile, said Philip Pamshak, who has been assisting with the mass burials.

“The place is still bad, so we had to run,” he said.

Quoting the local chiefs he spoke to when he visited the affected areas,

Plateau Deputy Gov. Sonni Tyoden said in a statement that at least 10 villages were targeted in the attack. Local residents said it was carried out by herdsmen after a resident complained that his banana plantation had been destroyed by their cattle.

Survivors told the AP the assailants arrived in large numbers and scattered across the villages, setting houses ablaze while shooting at people.

“There was tension everywhere. They macheted some and (killed) some with guns,” according to Yaputat Pokyes, one of the survivors. Many residents have fled the area while the injured are being treated in different hospitals, he said.

Residents also said security forces only arrived a day after the attack began, echoing criticisms from analysts that security forces are sometimes slow to respond when violence breaks out.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States