14 dead after gangs clash in southern Nigeria

14 dead 
after gangs clash in southern 
Nigeria
A policeman stand guard in Lagos, Nigeria, in this July 6, 2016 file photo. (AFP)
Updated 04 June 2017
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14 dead after gangs clash in southern Nigeria

14 dead 
after gangs clash in southern 
Nigeria

WARRI, Nigeria: Members of two rival gangs clashed in southern Nigeria in violence that left at least 14 people dead, a community leader said.
The fight between the Icelanders and Greenlanders took place in Sime, a community in the Tai district of Rivers State, a 25-minute drive from Port Harcourt, the hub of Nigeria’s restive oil-producing region.
“I totally condemn the killing of 14 people as a result of the incident. Earlier in the week, two persons were also killed,” said Bob Uelor Nkue, governor of the Tai local government council.
Omoni Nnamdi, a police spokesman for Rivers State, confirmed the clash while declining to give further details.
“I am still awaiting reports on the incident,” he said.
Jacobson Nbina, a politician with the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), said: “As I speak to you over 20 PDP youths of my community, Sime, have been brutally murdered and several others taken away alive as unknown gunmen invaded my community.”
Such gangs, known as “cults” in Nigeria, began as university confraternities decades ago before evolving into powerful armed groups that now rule the streets of the destitute region.
They are often aligned with political parties, who hire them as protection — and to intimidate their opponents.
A candidate from Nigeria’s ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) beat the PDP candidate in a closely contested senate by-election last December.