More than 1,100 villagers killed in Nigeria this year: Amnesty
Rights group says
government failings leave rural communities in northern Nigeria at the mercy of
'bandits'.
More than 1,100 people have been killed in rural areas
across several states of northern Nigeria amid an alarming
escalation in attacks and abductions during
the first half of the year, according to Amnesty International.
"The Nigerian
authorities have left rural communities at the mercy of rampaging gunmen who
have killed at least 1,126 people in the north of the country since
January," the London-rights group said in a new report on Monday, giving a
figure until the end of June.
The killings,
during attacks by "bandits" or armed cattle rustlers, and in clashes
between herders and farming communities for access to land, have been recurrent
for several years.
Amnesty said it had interviewed
civilians in Kaduna, Katsina, Niger, Plateau, Sokoto, Taraba and Zamfara
states, who reported living in fear of attacks and kidnappings.
The rights watchdog said
villages in the south of Kaduna state were affected the most, with at least 366
people killed in multiple attacks by armed men since January.
"Terrifying attacks on
rural communities in the north of Nigeria have been going on for years,"
said Osai Ojigho, director of Amnesty International Nigeria.
"The ongoing failure of security forces to
take sufficient steps to protect villagers from these predictable attacks is
utterly shameful," he added.
Gross incompetence'
Amnesty blamed state
authorities and the federal government for failing to protect the population.
Armed groups loot and set fire
to villages and frequently kidnap people for ransom, apparently with no
ideological motive. Many experts have recently warned against associating the
attackers with armed groups active in the region.
President Muhammadu Buhari was
elected in 2015 on a campaign promise to eradicate the armed group Boko Haram,
which has killed tens of thousands since it launched an armed in northeast
Nigeria in 2009.
Amnesty said most villagers
complained of receiving little or no help from security officials, despite
informing them prior or calling for help during attacks.
"During the attack, our leaders called and informed the
soldiers that the attackers are in the village, so the soldiers did not waste
time and they came but when they came and saw the type of ammunitions the
attackers had they left," a witness to an attack in Unguwan Magaji in
southern of Kaduna was quoted as saying by Amnesty.
"The following morning so
many soldiers came with their Hilux pick-up trucks to see the dead
bodies."
Ojigho decried reported abuse
of civilians who asked for more official help and protection.
"In their response to
these attacks, the Nigerian authorities have displayed gross incompetence and a
total disregard for people's lives," he said. "Arresting people who
dare to ask for help is a further blow."