100 killed in Nigeria attacks

100 killed in Nigeria attacks
Updated 16 March 2014
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100 killed in Nigeria attacks

100 killed in Nigeria attacks

KANO, Nigeria: At least 100 people were killed in weekend attacks on three villages in central Nigeria, local officials said Sunday.
Scores of residents were also injured when about 40 assailants armed with guns and machetes stormed the villages of Angwan Gata, Chenshyi and Angwan Sankwai, attacking locals in their sleep and torching their homes, said Yakubu Bitiyong, a lawmaker at the Kaduna state Parliament.
“We have at least 100 dead bodies from the three villages attacked by the gunmen” overnight Friday-Saturday, he said.
Some of the victims “were shot and burnt in their homes while others were hacked with machetes,” Bitiyong said.
Kaduna state police spokesman Aminu Lawan confirmed the attacks but refused to give a casualty toll or say who was behind the violence.
Local residents blamed the bloodshed on Muslim Fulani herdsmen, who have been accused of similar raids in the past.
Chenshyi village was the worst affected with at least 50 people killed, said Adamu Marshall, a spokesman for the Southern Kaduna Peoples’ Union, a regional political and cultural body.
“Many people are still in the bush, afraid to return to their burnt homes,” he said, confirming a total toll of at least 100 dead.
Fulani leaders have for years complained about the loss of grazing land, which is crucial to their livelihood, with resentment between the herdsmen and their agrarian neighbors rising over the past decade. Most of the Fulani-linked violence has been concentrated in the religiously divided center of the country, where rivalries between mostly Muslim herdsmen and mostly Christian farmers have helped fuel the unrest.
260 illegal oil refineries destroyed
Meanwhile, the Nigerian Navy said it has destroyed 260 illegal oil refineries and burned 100,000 tons of contraband fuel, but critics say this targeting of small-time criminals fails to confront the biggest culprits in oil thefts — the politically-connected criminal cartels who sell on the international market.
Similar missions in the past have failed to slow thefts valued at more than $20 million a day on the world market. Shell Nigeria, the biggest operator in the West African nation, said it lost $1 billion to oil thefts in 2013.