11 killed in central Nigeria violence: state government

AFP  |  Makurdi 


Eleven people have been killed in central Nigeria, the state government said today, a day after at least 18 people died in an attack on a church that caused widespread outrage.

Rilwanu Adamu, an adviser to the governor on Islamic affairs, said the attack happened in the state capital, Makurdi, and targeted ethnic Hausa traders.

"We lost 11 of our people.... We have five people also hospitalised in Makurdi," he said, warning that the death toll could yet rise. Two mosques were razed to the ground and traders' goods ransacked, said Adamu.

The latest deaths came in the wake of an attack on a church in the Mbalom community south of Makurdi on Tuesday, which left 16 worshippers and two Roman Catholic priests dead.

described the attack, which locals blamed on nomadic herdsmen, as "evil and satanic" and said it was designed to whip up religious conflict.

Riots erupted in Makurdi following the deaths, forcing police to fire teargas to disperse the crowd.

Hundreds of people have been killed in tit-for-tat violence in and other central states since the start of this year in an escalation of a decades-old dispute over land and water.

The attacks have been given an ethnic and religious dimension because the herdsmen are Fulani Muslims from northern while the farmers are largely Christian.

Buhari has been criticised for failing to stop the violence because he is also a Fulani Muslim from the north.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, April 26 2018. 00:10 IST