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BURIALS BEGIN FOR VICTIMS of NIGERIA MASSACRES
Robyn Dixon, Aminu Abubakar, Los Angeles Times
Tuesday, March 9, 2010
Nigeria -- The victims of Sunday's sectarian
massacres were buried in mass graves in central Nigeria on Monday as
survivors told horrific stories of Christian villagers being trapped
in nets and hacked to death by Muslim herdsmen.
Reports on the death toll differed wildly, with some placing it at
about 200 and others reporting 528 killed and thousands injured.
Casualty figures in the recurrent Muslim-Christian violence in
Nigeria's volatile Plateau State are often difficult to ascertain,
as each side inflates its losses.
However attacks in January and on Sunday have left at least 500
dead, making it the worst violence here for some years.
Hundreds of nomadic Fulani herdsmen launched coordinated attacks on
three Christian villages of Dogo Nahawa, Ratsat and Zot, just south
of Jos, about 3 a.m. Sunday.
The killers planted nets and animal traps outside huts of the
villagers, mainly peasant farmers, then charged while firing
weapons, according to human rights lawyer Shehu Sani of the
non-government Civil Rights Congress, who visited the villages and
interviewed dozens of survivors.
"People came out of their houses and started falling into the animal
traps and mosquito nets and then they were hacked down," he said. "
Plateau State, which lies on the divide between the mainly Muslim
north and largely Christian south, has seen thousands killed in the
last decade. Fulani herdsmen have accused a group of indigenous
Christians - the Berom - of attacking their camp last month, killing
four people and stealing 200 cattle.
Violence in the region, which appears unrelated to ongoing national
sectarian political tensions, has ethnic as well as religious
overtones. Many clashes have involved rampaging mobs of the
indigenous Christians and of Muslim settlers - the Hausa, who
started moving into the area early last century. The Muslim Fulani
herdsmen, who move through the area with their cattle, are less
often involved.
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