|
More
than 200 bodies — many of them women and
children — lay in the streets of a
central Nigerian town after a renewed
spate of Christian-Muslim violence,
witnesses said Sunday, just months after
religious violence tore through a nearby
city and left hundreds dead.
Yemi Kosoko, a reporter with the
independent Nigerian news network
Channels, told The Associated Press most
of the bodies appeared to be women and
children killed by blows from machetes.
Kosoko said the dead lined the streets
of Dogo Nahawa, a village about three
miles (five kilometers) south of the
city of Jos.
Kosoko said he made the count Sunday
afternoon with an official from the
state government. Military units began
surrounding the affected villages around
the same time, said Red Cross spokesman
Robin Waubo. Waubo said the agency did
not know how many people may have died
in the the fighting, though officials
have been sent to local morgues and
hospitals.
Witnesses said the violence began in the
mostly Christian village at about 3 a.m.
Sunday — an hour when the area should
have been under curfew and guarded by
the military. Jos has remained under a
curfew since violence in January left
more than 300 people dead — the majority
of them Muslims.
Police and military officials declined
to comment on the attack or the
motivation for the violence.
"It
appears to be reprisal attacks," Waubo
said.
In
nearby Bauchi state, more than 600
people fled to a makeshift camp still
holding victims of January's violence,
said Red Cross official Adamu Abubakar.
"They started running away from the
fighting," Abubakar said by phone. He
said more continued to come.
Sectarian violence in this region of
Nigeria has left thousands dead over the
past decade. The latest outbreak came
despite the Nigerian government's
efforts to quell religious extremism in
the West African country.
Associated Press Writer Bashir Adigun
contributed to this report from Abuja,
Nigeria. Gambrell reported from Lagos,
Nigeria.
|