Rantburg

Today's Front Page   View All of Fri 05/30/2025 View Thu 05/29/2025 View Wed 05/28/2025 View Tue 05/27/2025 View Mon 05/26/2025 View Sun 05/25/2025 View Sat 05/24/2025
2004-10-07 Africa: Subsaharan
More than 53,000 Nigerians killed in three years of ethnic strife
Three years of fighting between rival Christian and Muslim ethnic groups in the central Nigerian state of Plateau have claimed 53,787 lives, a third of them children, the state administration said. The figure is the first official toll given for the conflict, which has pitched heavily armed gangs from rival nomadic and farming communities against one another in a battle for land and power, and far exceeds previous estimates. Officials said that the figure was compiled from reports from the victims' relatives and covered the period from September 7, 2001 to May 18 of this year, when President Olusegun Obasanjo imposed emergency rule on the highland region. "They were killed as a result of the hostilities, some through machetes or bullets, some from other things," said Ezekiel Dalyop, the spokesman for Plateau's administrator Chris Alli. "The committee visited the local governments and met with officials. Those who lost their relatives provided the statistics. Every family has figures and released them to the committee. We just did the summary," he told AFP.

Alli's special advisor on resettlement and rehabilitation, Thomas Kangnaan, on Wednesday told reporters in the state capital Jos that of those killed, 18,931 were men, 17,397 were women and 17,459 were children. But some in Plateau said that the figures, which are greater than any estimate given by an outside agency, appear too high, and suggested that Alli's team may be exaggerating the death toll in order to remain in power. "I don't think it is reliable. The source is not very clear, some people might be just missing, some others have left," said Paul Wai of the pressure group the Middle Belt Progressive Movement, which opposes emergency rule.
"Maybe they just stepped out to buy beer!"
Plateau State lies in Nigeria's notoriously unruly central belt, the faultline between northern mainly Muslim tribes and the Christian south.
Posted by Fred 2004-10-07 7:08:58 PM|| || Front Page|| [11134 views since 2007-05-07]  Top

#1 yes, but...it's hard to blame it on the US, so they don't count. Besides the rights groups are very busy right now with Guantanamo, Abu Gharab, and Bush-Hitler's TANG lies. As soon as they wrap up their work on his death camps here in the US, they will get to passing a strongly worded rebuke through the UN.
Posted by 2b 2004-10-07 8:07:35 PM||   2004-10-07 8:07:35 PM|| Front Page Top

21:50 Silentbrick
21:16 Anomalous Sources
19:26 NN2N1
19:12 Elmerert Hupens2660
18:34 Chantry
18:23 Gritch Throlumble3163
18:15 Elmerert Hupens2660
18:11 MikeKozlowski
18:11 MikeKozlowski
17:50 Pancho Poodle8452
17:34 Elmerert Hupens2660
17:22 DooDahMan
17:15 DooDahMan
17:10 DooDahMan
17:08 DooDahMan
17:08 DooDahMan
16:52 DarthVader
15:31 NoMoreBS
15:24 DarthVader
15:20 NoMoreBS
15:15 Griter+Slash1619
15:04 NoMoreBS
14:51 Grom the Affective
14:50 Secret Master









Paypal:
Google
Search WWW Search rantburg.com