The Citizen (Gauteng)

Criminals on killing spree in Nigeria

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– Gunmen have killed 34 people in northwest Nigeria’s Kaduna State, including two soldiers, in the latest attack blamed on heavily armed criminal gangs, local authoritie­s said.

More than 200 homes were also destroyed in Sunday’s attack on four villages in the Kaura local district, Kaduna State security commission­er Samuel Aruwan said in a statement.

Northwest and central Nigeria have long been terrorised by criminal gangs – known locally as bandits – who raid villages, conduct mass kidnapping­s for ransom and steal cattle. But attacks and abductions have intensifie­d.

Sunday’s attack came on the same day as another raid that killed 16 people in a remote village in northweste­rn Zamfara State.

A week earlier, gunmen killed 11 security personnel, including seven policemen and four vigilantes, in attacks in central and northweste­rn Nigeria.

The gangs, who were officially declared terrorists by the government in January, operate from camps hidden in a vast forest across Zamfara, Katsina, Kaduna and Niger states.

Bandit violence in Nigeria’s northwest is just one challenge facing security forces, who are also battling against a 12-year jihadist insurgency in the northeast and separatist tensions in the southeast of Africa’s most populous nation.

This month, gunmen killed at least 57 members of a local self-defence vigilante group in clashes in northweste­rn Kebbi State, prompting President Muhammadu Buhari to condemn their “brutal murder”.

Local residents often form informal vigilante units – known as yansakai – to protect villages from bandit raids, though some states banned them after they were accused of extrajudic­ial killings.

But the vigilante groups are often involved in tit-for-tat clashes with bandits. Security experts have warned the gangs, who are driven by financial motives, are increasing­ly forging alliances with jihadists from the northeast of Nigeria. –

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