Gunmen kill 43 at village market in Nigeria's troubled northwest
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Gunmen killed 43 people at a village market in northwest
Nigeria's Sokoto state on Monday.
Gunmen from a suspected criminal gang attacked a village
market in northwest Nigeria's Sokoto state, killing 43 people, the state
government said Monday.
Heavily armed gangs known locally as bandits have terrorised
northwest and central Nigeria for years, raiding and looting villages, but attacks
have become even more violent in recent months.
"Forty-three people have been confirmed dead following
the attack by bandits in Goronyo village" on Sunday, Sokoto government
spokesman Muhammad Bello said in a statement.
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"It was a market day and there were many traders,"
Bello told AFP by phone.
Police spokesman Sanusi Abubakar also confirmed that bandits
attacked Goronyo late on Sunday.
"Our security operatives are there to conduct
investigations," Abubakar added, without giving details.
Phone networks in the area have been suspended for weeks to
disrupt the gangs' operations, making information-gathering difficult.
A gang raided another village market on October 8, in Sabon
Birni district near the border with Niger, killing 19 people.
Since last month, Nigerian troops have been conducting air
and ground operations against bandit camps in neighbouring Zamfara state.
Telecom services were also shut down in Zamfara, and parts
of Kaduna and Katsina states.
Officials in Sokoto are worried that bandits are relocating
to the state as a result of operations in Zamfara.
"We're faced and bedevilled by many security challenges
in our own area here, particularly banditry, kidnapping and other associated
crimes," wrote Bello, on behalf of the state governor.
Governor Aminu Waziri Tambuwal had requested "the
presence of more forces in the state and the deployment of more
resources", he added.
Last month, 17 Nigerian security personnel were killed when
gunmen attacked their base in Sabon Birni, an assault the military blamed on
Islamic State-aligned jihadists.
Although the bandits have no known ideological agenda,
concerns have grown about jihadist inroads in the region.
Violence has spiralled in recent months across the
northwest, forcing thousands of already vulnerable people to flee their homes,
a situation aid agencies fear risks becoming a humanitarian crisis.
Since January 2020, about 50,000 people have fled from their
homes in the northwest alone, according to the International Organization for
Migration.
More than 80,000 additional people have fled to neighbouring
Niger over the past two years.
Increasingly, bandits have turned to mass kidnapping and
have taken hundreds of schoolchildren since December. Most have been freed or
released after ransom but dozens are still being held.
The violence is just one challenge facing Nigeria's security
forces. They are also battling a 12-year jihadist insurgency in the northeast
that has killed more than 40,000 people.
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