At least 96 people were killed in Benue state in Nigeria’s middle
belt region when several villages were attacked by suspected Fulani
herdsmen, a state police spokesman and an army source said on Tuesday.
Hundreds are killed each year in clashes pitting the semi-nomadic,
cattle-herding Fulani people against more settled communities that
practice a mix of farming and cattle rearing, driven by disputes centred
around land use.
A senior military officer said fighting around five villages lasted several days in the Logo local government area of Benue.
Police spokesman Austine Ezeani said a mobile police unit was deployed to the area.
The unrest is often seen as sectarian in nature since Fulanis are
Muslim and the communities with which they are in conflict in central
Nigeria – where the country’s mostly Christian south and Muslim north
meet – tend to be Christian.
Nigerian troops fought militiamen in early May after dozens were
killed in villages on the border of middle belt states Plateau and
Taraba.
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