ABUJA, NIGERIA (BosNewsLife)--
Nigerian Christians appealed for prayers Tuesday, April 2, after Easter
season violence in troubled central Nigeria left as many as 80 people
dead and displaced some 4,500 others.
At least 19 people were killed since Easter Sunday when gunmen believed
to be nomadic Muslim cattle herders attacked the mostly Christian Atakar
group in Kaura district, a remote area of Kaduna state, officials said.
Witnesses said the attacks on three communities, including the Mafang
and Zilang villages, killed many women and children. Kaduna police
spokesman Aminu Lawan told reporters his forces were still
investigating.
Ataka Christians live near Plateau state where authorities claimed
fighting between cattle herders, who are mainly Fulani Muslims, and
Christian villages killed nearly 60 people in recent days.
The area is on the uneasy dividing line between Nigeria's predominantly Muslim north and largely Christian south.
MANY FLEE
Christians said that following Sunday's violence, thousands of villagers fled to the nearby hills.
Local government official Kumai Badu said in published remarks that some
4,500 people were displaced and two camps had been set up to house
them.
Some who returned later to assess the extent of the damage were also
murdered, according to rights group Christian Solidarity Worldwide
(CSW). Assailants also razed several homes, Christians said.
Many of those displaced by the destruction are reported to be staying in
the local Amisi Primary School, as well as in nearby Fadan Attakar and
Mifi villages.
"We request prayers for, and extend our condolences to the families of
all those who lost their lives during the tragic events of last week,"
said Reverend Yunusa Nmadu, the chief executive officer of CSW-Nigeria.
"We also call on the relevant state governments to provide urgent assistance to the injured and displaced," Nmadu added.
MORE KILLINGS
The latest violence came after at least 36 people died and dozens of
houses were burned in neighboring Plateau state when ethnic Fulani
Muslims raided Christian villages in the week leading to Easter.
The military said the latest casualties were in addition to at least 23
people killed in attacks in the volatile region on March 20 and 21.
In of the latest incidents in Plateau State, nine people were killed and
three injured Thursday, March 28, when gunmen believed to be Fulanis
attacked the village of Ratas in Barkin Ladi area, police and government
officials said.
Emmanuel Lohman, a government official in Barkin Ladi, said that the
assailants, armed with assault rifles, struck opened fire in the night
while many villagers were sleeping.
Christian villagers, who farm the fertile soils of Plateau, blamed nomadic "Hausa-Fulani cattle herdsmen" for the attack.
CATTLE BREEDERS
Muhammadu Nura, the state secretary of a cattle breeders association,
reportedly said that Hausa-Fulani people had been killed in "reprisals",
but denied herders were involved the attacks.
An attack and subsequent shootout in the Bokkos area killed 25 people on
Wednesday, March 27, by suspected Fulanis news reports said. Two police
officers were wounded by gunfire.
Violence in the Riyom district left at least two police officers dead
when their patrol was ambushed March 25 after at least 30 houses were
burnt in the area on March 23, police said.
The attacks have triggered fears of a wider conflict in an area where
thousands have been killed or displaced in recent years in a cycle of
attacks and reprisals.
Local Christians, who are mainly farmers, have expressed concerns that
Fulani Muslim herdsmen take over land to store arms and prepare further
attacks in the region.
"SYSTEMATIC MANNER"
Nmadu said "the systematic manner in which these attacks now occur
indicates a greater degree of organization than has previously been the
case."
The reverend added that the tensions require an "urgent reassessment of
strategy" by the government "and a surge in the number of troops
assigned to these areas."
CSW’s Chief Executive Mervyn Thomas told BosNewsLife that recent
"escalation of assaults on villagers on the Plateau-Kaduna border, the
consistent targeting of women and children and the mass displacement of
inhabitants appear to be part of a deliberate attempt to rid these areas
of their original inhabitants."
Thomas said it "is worrying that armed groups can still move freely,
attacking for lengthy periods despite a security presence in each
state." Rights investigators have urged governments of Kaduna, Plateau
and even Bauchi States to track down and apprehend the perpetrators.
Islamic group Boko Haram, which means 'Western education is a sin', has
also been linked to attacks against Christians as it seeks to carve out
an Islamic state. (With reporting by BosNewsLife's Stefan J. Bos).
By BosNewsLife Africa Service
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