BSS
  20 Dec 2021, 09:34

Cattle thieves kill 38 civilians in northern Nigeria

   KANO, Nigeria, Dec 20, 2021 (BSS/AFP) - Armed cattle thieves killed 38
people Sunday in three separate attacks in northern Nigeria's Kaduna state, a
local official said, the latest bloodshed to hit the region.

   The assailants, who usually ride on motorcycles, stormed the villages of
Kauran Fawa, Marke and Riheya in the Giwa district, Samuel Aruwan, the
internal affairs commissioner for Kaduna state, said in a statement.

   "Security agencies have confirmed... that 38 people were killed across the
locations attacked," Aruwan said.

   "Houses, trucks, and cars were also burned, along with agricultural
produce at various farms," he said.

   In a statement Sunday evening, President Muhammadu Buhari condemned the
"gruesome nature" of the latest killings.

   Noting that there had been several other deadly attacks in Kaduna state
over the past week, he repeated his call to the security and intelligence
chiefs "to do everything they can to destroy" the attackers.

   So far, 29 of the victims have been identified.

   - Deadly raids, rustling, kidnappings -

   Northwest and central Nigeria have been plagued by criminal gangs of
cattle thieves and kidnappers who raid villages, killing residents, stealing
cattle and burning and looting homes.

   The bandits have been increasingly targeting schools in mass abductions of
schoolchildren to squeeze ransom from parents and authorities.

   A months-long telecom shutdown and military operations in the region have
failed to end the violence.

   Kaduna has been one of the three states worst-hit by the violence.

   In August, an armed gang stormed a heavily guarded elite military academy
in Kaduna city, killing two officers and abducting another, a daring attack
that embarrassed the military.

   The criminal gangs are known to maintain camps in the Rugu forest, which
straddles Kaduna, Zamfara, Katsina and Niger states.

   In recent days, youth groups have staged protests against the violence,
which were dispersed by security forces, who detained protest organisers.