Gunmen storm Plateau state town, kill 5---Police
(Nigeria) Some 300 gunmen stormed a mostly Christian village in Plateau State on Sunday, killing five people and burning scores of homes,
police said.
The early morning attack targeted the village of Kuka in
Plateau State, which roughly falls on the dividing line between Nigeria's
mainly Christian south and predominately Muslim north.
"Five people were killed and many houses were
burnt," said Plateau's police spokeswoman Felicia Anslem. "About 300
attackers invaded the community early on Sunday," she added.
The decade-long mostly sectarian conflict in Plateau has
left thousands dead.
Herdsmen from the Fulani-Hausa ethnic group, which is mostly
Muslim, have been blamed for scores of attacks on the primarily Christian Berom
community.
The Berom are considered the state's indigenous people,
which legally gives them enhanced rights, including better access to land,
education and public offices.
Fulani leaders have for years claimed that the violence can
only be tempered if state leaders, who are almost entirely Berom, agree to
major political reforms.
It was not clear who carried out the latest attack. While
Kuka is a mostly Christian village, some of the victims were said to have been
Fulanis.
Resident Abdullahi Ragmin said "200 houses" were
burnt, and described the victims as ranging from age 35 to 60, in an account
confirmed by other witnesses.
Salisu Mustapha, military spokesman in Plateau, confirmed
the attack but said the gunmen had "been repelled and calm has returned to
the community".
The ongoing peace process in Plateau has mostly failed to
stop the violence, with deep mistrust persisting between the state's
politicians and the security forces.
Berom leaders have accused the military of supporting and at
times cooperating with the Fulani, but such allegations have not been
definitely proved.
Plateau has also been targeted by the Islamist group Boko
Haram, which is waging a four-year insurgency in the north, but most of the
unrest has stemmed from local sectarian divisions.
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