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Armed gang kills at least 34 in northwest Nigeria, police say

by Reuters
Sunday, 16 June 2019 12:53 GMT

Artisans sit on top firewood loaded at the back of a truck along Sokoto-Anka road in northeastern state of Zamfara August 14, 2013. REUTERS/Akintunde Akinleye

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Hundreds of people have died in the northwest region this year, adding to security problems in a country struggling with Islamist insurgencies and conflict between farmers and herders

By Ardo Hazzad

BAUCHI, Nigeria, June 16 (Reuters) - An armed gang killed at least 34 people in attacks on villages in northwest Nigeria, police said on Sunday, part of a wave of violence the government has blamed on bandits.

Hundreds of people have died in the northwest region this year, adding to security problems in a country already struggling with Islamist insurgencies in the northeast and a brutal conflict between farmers and herders in central states.

The armed gang came to unprotected villages in the northwestern state of Zamfara on Friday night, killing 34 people, said Muhammed Shehu, police spokesman for the state.

People from the village told Reuters the attackers escaped.

"We heard gunshots and saw people running for shelter, chased by men on motorbikes," said Shehu Shinkafi.

"We immediately took cover in a house nearby, and after the bandits were done with their killing spree they moved to a nearby village," he said, adding he counted 12 bodies in his village alone.

The gang left without any resistance as there were no security agents in the area, and it was only after the massacre that police arrived hours later, Shinkafi and two other witnesses said. (Reporting by Ardo Hazzad in Bauchi; Writing by Paul Carsten; Editing by Mark Potter)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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