At least 23 villagers have died in clashes between two mainly fishing
and farming communities in central Nigeria’s Benue state, police said
Sunday.
“Some 23 corpses have been recovered following the
fighting between Ologba and Egba communities in Agatu local government
area of the state,” state police spokesman Austin Ezeani told AFP.
He
said several villagers were also injured, adding that the latest
clashes in the region centred on a dispute over fishing rights in the
area.
“The two neighbours were fighting over ownership of a fish
pond. The violence broke out on Friday and continued until Saturday with
many people also injured,” he said.
Ezeani said the Egba people
were also accusing the Ologba villagers of aiding Fulani herdsmen to
attack them last month, killing 82 villagers.
“The Egba people
believed the Fulani herdsmen could not have entered their community
without passing through Ologba. So they believed the Ologba villagers
must have aided the Fulani in that attack,” he said.
He said police had deployed to the area. “We have contained the violence. The place is now calm.”
Local media said between 45 and 60 people were killed in the clashes.
Hundreds
of people have been killed in attacks and reprisal attacks between
farmers and ethnic Fulani herdsmen in the past few years in the state.
Fighting
over grazing rights is common in Nigeria, pitting herdsmen against
farmers and frequently resulting in deadly clashes and reprisal attacks.
Benue
state falls in Nigeria’s so-called “Middle Belt”, where the mainly
Christian south meets the majority Muslim north, and has been the site
of waves of sectarian and communal violence in recent years.
A
six-year-old Boko Haram insurgency in Nigeria’s northeast has claimed
13,000 lives and sent about 1.5 million people fleeing their homes.
The
Islamists have in recent months widened their attacks into neighbouring
nations, prompting Chad, Cameroon and Niger to launch a joint offensive
with the Nigerian army, resulting in a series of rebel-held towns and
villages being recaptured in Nigeria’s northeast.
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