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Africa Subsaharan
Suspected Fulani Herdsmen Kill 30 in Nigeria
2014-04-07
[AnNahar] Gunmen believed to be Fulani herdsmen stormed a meeting in northern Nigeria's Zamfara state and killed 30 people, police said Sunday.

"Thirty people were killed and several others injured," Zamfara state police front man Lawal Abdullahi told Agence La Belle France Presse.

"The incident happened in Galadima yesterday during a meeting of community leaders and representatives of vigilante groups" who were discussing ways to thwart armed robbers and cattle rustlers, he said.

He said security forces had deployed to the area.

Survivors said more than 60 people might have died in the attack.

"We counted 61 bodies from the scene of the attack last night, while many people were maimed," a survivor who gave his name only as Babaginda from neighboring Kaduna state told AFP.

He said he was lucky to escape with his life and implored the security forces to stem incessant attacks by Fulani rustlers on villages in the area.

The conflict between Fulani herdsmen and local farmers over land rights, particularly in central Nigeria, has persisted for more than a decade despite a series of peace efforts across several states.

Last month, some 100 people were killed in Kaduna state when assailants armed with guns and machetes attacked local farming villages.

Fulani leaders have for years complained about the loss of grazing land crucial to their livelihood, and resentment between the herdsmen and their agrarian neighbors has risen over the past decade.

Under Nigerian law, indigenous people have enhanced rights in their home areas, including preferential access to public education and jobs.

The Fulani claim they have been systematically disenfranchised. The disputes vary from state to state and often have a religious element, especially in areas where farmers are predominantly Christian.
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