LAGOS, Nigeria
At least 37 villagers were killed in Nigeria’s north during an attack on a remote village on Sunday, according to witnesses.
The attack in Kaura council area in the restive
Kaduna state was blamed on a prolonged religious crisis between Hausa-Fulani
residents, who mostly reside in the northern part of the state, and the
Christians who are concentrated in the south.
Residents and health workers at the hospitals where
corpses and the injured were taken told The Associated Press of how assailants
arrived at the Madamai village in large numbers with guns and machetes on
Sunday evening.
A police spokesman in Kaduna said he has not been
briefed about the incident in the area known as a violence hotspot. In August,
five people were killed and some houses were burned down during a similar
violence outbreak in Kaura.
On Sunday, “37 people were killed; 35 dead bodies
(were) discovered in the village, two (died) in the hospital,” said Derek
Christopher, a local nurse at the General Hospital Kafanchan. He said the
initial death toll was 30 as of Sunday night.
Those injured were given urgent medical attention
before being referred to the Bingham University Teaching Hospital in Plateau
state, which is about 70 miles (115 kilometers) away from the affected village.
At the hospital in Plateau, Sunday Eze said he
narrowly escaped after being shot by the assailants. “They shot me on my hand,”
he said, and, when asked how many the gunmen were, added ruefully: “They were
plenty; these people.”
Another resident who is overseeing care for those
injured alleged that the attackers were “Fulani herdsmen”, referring to herders
from the Fulani tribe who have been clashing with the predominantly Christian
communities in southern Kaduna for many years.
“We have gunshots and we have machete cuts,” said
resident Cecilia Simon. “In the hospital here, we are six (that arrived from
the village). This thing is not our fault; maybe it is the fault of the
government.”
In Nigeria’s middle belt and central regions, deadly
clashes between local communities and Fulani herdsmen continues in a cycle of
violence that has defied measures introduced by authorities including the
deployment of thousands of security operatives to restore peace.
Security operatives deployed to violence hotspots
usually leave those areas once their special security operation is over,
leaving the remote communities yet again with an inadequate security presence.
Arrests are rarely carried out, and in Kaduna
state, authorities have been accused of failing to act on the reports of
government panels set up to investigate the crisis. - AP
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