According to local reports, on
Saturday 30 March well-armed men dressed in black surrounded the villages
before launching an assault that continued into Easter Sunday.
Many villagers fled to the nearby
hills. Some who returned later to assess the extent of the damage were also
murdered. The majority of victims were women and children. The assailants also
razed a significant number of homes. Many of those displaced by the destruction
are reported to be staying in the local Amisi Primary School, as well as in
nearby Fadan Attakar and Mifi villages.
The CEO of Christian Solidarity
Worldwide-Nigeria (CSW-N), said, “We request prayers for, and extend our
condolences to the families of all those who lost their lives during the tragic
events of last week. We also call on the relevant state governments to provide
urgent assistance to the injured and displaced. The systematic manner in which
these attacks now occur indicates a greater degree of organisation than has
previously been the case and requires an urgent reassessment of strategy and a
surge in the number of troops assigned to these areas."
Christian Solidarity Worldwide (CSW)
was informed that over a month ago, a local chief allowed Fulanis to settle on
land on a hillside near Kirim Village after they were ordered to leave Zangon
Kataf LGA, also in Southern Kaduna, following a Fulani attack on Aduwan
Village. In recent weeks the local community had begun to ask questions after
it became apparent that the Fulanis were storing arms in the area.
The assault on the villages in
Kaduna occurred during the same week that a series of attacks on villages in
Wase and Riyom LGAs in neighbouring Plateau State claimed the lives of at least
60 people, mostly women and children, and escalated local tensions. Prior to
this, attacks in Riyom LGA over a two month period had claimed 16 lives.
CSW’s
Chief Executive Mervyn Thomas said, "While attacks on remote villages by
well-armed Fulanis have occurred sporadically since 2010, the recent escalation
of assaults on villagers on the Plateau-Kaduna border, the consistent targeting
of women and children and the mass displacement of inhabitants appear to be
part of a deliberate attempt to rid these areas of their original inhabitants.
It is worrying that armed groups can still move freely, attacking for lengthy
periods despite a security presence in each state. Tackling this issue
effectively will require a comprehensive and unified effort by the governments
of Kaduna, Plateau and even Bauchi States to track down and apprehend the
perpetrators.”
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