TPL_GK_LANG_MOBILE_MENU
20 killed in 2 simultaneous car bombs in Niger

20 killed in 2 simultaneous car bom…

Niger's defense ministe...

Amid signs of turmoil, South Sudan confident oil will flow

Amid signs of turmoil, South Sudan …

Following a lengthy Cab...

Nigeria prepares to bury writer Achebe

Nigeria prepares to bury writer Ach…

Writer Chinua Achebe, w...

Polio cases found in Kenya and Somalia - WHO

Polio cases found in Kenya and Soma…

The World Health Organi...

Mugabe signs Zimbabwe new constitution, paving way for vote

Mugabe signs Zimbabwe new constitut…

Zimbabwe President Robe...

Kenya just fine about Obama avoiding it on Africa trip

Kenya just fine about Obama avoidin…

 Kenya said Tuesday it ...

Nigerian military task force say more than 200 Boko Haram captured

Nigerian military task force say mo…

Nearly a week after Nig...

Talks to resume with Mali government, Tuaregs

Talks to resume with Mali governmen…

Talks will resume soon ...

Prev Next

A+ A A-

Gunmen kill 12, dozens injured in villages in Adamawa

Gunmen surrounded villages in Adamawa, northeast Nigeria and set them ablaze, killing at least 12 people and wounding 48 others in violence that could spread as attackers remain hiding in the rural region, the Nigerian Red Cross said Monday.

The attacks targeted four villages early Sunday morning in a remote area of Adamawa state, which borders Cameroon. The number of dead could rise as relief workers remain unable to reach the villages affected and about 2,000 people have fled, the Red Cross said in a report obtained by The Associated Press.

Volunteers "could not get safe access to these affected communities as the gunmen are said to be in the bush around the communities changing plans," the report read. It estimated as many as 100 gunmen attacked the villages.

The dead included at least one police officer, the report read. Those injured suffered gunshot and machete wounds.

Relief workers had warned this weekend that people had begun fleeing the Lamurde local government area as rumors of an attack spread through the villages. The attack likely is a reprisal from Hausa Fulani cattle herdsmen over another killing earlier this year, the Red Cross said.

Soldiers apparently had surrounded the area by Monday. Yushau Shuaib, a spokesman for Nigeria's National Emergency Management Agency, said Monday that officials were aware of the violence, but had no further details. Police officials in Adamawa state could not be immediately reached for comment.

Nigeria, a multiethnic nation of more than 160 million people, often sees outbreaks of violence across religious lines. However, the attacks often find their root in political and economic problems. Meanwhile, the nation is facing increasingly bloody sectarian attacks from a radical Islamist sect known as Boko Haram.

User Registration
or Cancel