‘Bandits’ Kill Seven in Northern Nigeria: Police
Armed gangs, called bandits by locals, regularly raid villages in central and northwestern Nigeria, killing and kidnapping people as well as looting and burning homes.
Gunmen have killed two policemen and five farmers in two separate attacks in northern Nigeria, police said.
Armed gangs, called bandits by locals, regularly raid villages in central and northwestern Nigeria, killing and kidnapping people as well as looting and burning homes.
A gang of around 100 gunmen dressed in army camouflage stormed a police station in the town of Gidan Madi in Sokoto state on Thursday, killing two officers and injuring another, police spokesman Muhammad Sadiq said.
Residents in Gidan Madi told AFP that the attackers carted away weapons from the police station before withdrawing into the bush.
Gunmen are believed to hide in the nearby Rugu forest that stretches across Zamfara, Katsina, Kaduna, and Niger states.
Their attacks are generally motivated by money, but security experts have warned that the region’s jihadist groups have attempted to infiltrate their ranks.
Later on Thursday, a group of suspected cattle thieves launched an attack on the farming village of Yanteba in Katsina state, killing five farmers, state police spokesman Gambo Isah said.
The attack was an apparent reprisal for the killing of three gang members two days earlier.