Jamaica Gleaner

Families seek justice as armed groups fight for control

-

CHRISTIAN JONATHAN’S mother was holding the nine -month-old boy in her arms when she was shot dead during an attack on their village in northweste­rn Nigeria. The assailants cut off one of Christian’s fingers and abandoned him by the side of the road with a bullet wound in his tiny leg.

“They left him on the ground beside his mother’s body,” said Joshua Jonathan, Christian’s father. “They thought the boy was dead.”

The late-night attack in April in Runji, Kaduna State, left 33 people dead, most of them burned alive or shot dead. Many more have been killed in the continuing clashes between nomadic cattle herders and farming communitie­s in north west and central regions of the West African nation, including more than 100 this month in Plateau state.

The decades-long violence is becoming more deadly, killing at least 2,600 people in 2021, according to the most recent data from the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project. Once armed with sticks, the groups now fight with guns that have been smuggled into the country.

Both sides accuse the government of in justice and marginalis­ation, but the clashes have also taken on a religious dimension, giving rise to militias that side with the herders, who are primarily Muslim, or the farmers from Christian communitie­s.

HUGE CHALLENGE

The growing security crisis presents a huge challenge for Nigeria’s incoming president, Bola Tinubu, who rose to power in Nigeria — Africa’s largest economy and among its top oil producers — promising to improve the lives of affected communitie­s and address the root causes of the crisis by providing jobs and ensuring justice.

If the violence isn’t reined in, analysts say, it could further destabilis­e the country and drive more of its 216 million people into poverty. UN agencies say the violence affects mostly children, who are already threatened by malnutriti­on, and women, who are often abducted and forced into marriage.

The response of security forces can be slow and arrests are rare, prompting a growing number of communitie­s to defend themselves when they come under siege.

“There is a substantia­l loss of confidence in the government as a protector of citizens,” said Nnamdi Obasi, the senior adviser for Nigeria at the Internatio­nal Crisis Group. Obasi warned that the failure of the incoming administra­tion to speedily resolve the conflict would lead to “more people seeking their own selfdefenc­e, more proliferat­ion of weapons, more criminal groups, and a rise in organised armed groups.”

In Runji, an agrarian village, The Associated Press spoke to some survivors in hospital beds and others touring a mass grave and their razed houses. They said they were under attack for hours and that the gunmen fled long before security forces arrived. Every household bears a scar. Christophe­r Dauda’s family was trying to escape when the gunmen caught up with his wife and four children, killing all five. Danjuma Joshua’s two daughters were shot in the back while they tried to flee. In the home of Asabe Philip, who survived but has burns all over her body, the assailants burned five children alive as they cowered in one room.

FILL THE VOID

Christian’s aunt has tried to fill the void left by the killing of his mother. His father said Christian cries a lot and barely sleeps, although his physical wounds are gradually healing.

“We try to manage with what we have left,” Joshua Jonathan said.

On the other side of the conflict, the herders say they are also under attack. They complain of cattle rustling and extrajudic­ial killings by local security groups working as community vigilantes.

Abdullahi Bello Bodejo, the president of the national herders’ associatio­n, denied that anyone in the group was responsibl­e for the violence. Most of the herders belong to the Fulanis, an ethnic group.

“Fulanis are not the killers. Any person carrying out killings is not our member. Sometimes, when communitie­s accuse us of killings, 75 per cent is not true; they have their own crisis, but always blame Fulanis,” said Bodejo.

Nigerian security forces say they have arrested dozens of gunmen and recovered their weapons. But the assailants are estimated to number in the thousands and can easily recruit new members, according to Abdulaziz Abdulaziz, a conflict researcher.

“There is a limit to the kinetic (military) operations, as it doesn’t address the socio-economic issue that gave rise to banditry in the region in the first place,” said Oluwole Ojewale of the Africafocu­sed Institute of Security Studies. He said the incoming Tinubu administra­tion must work with state government­s to address unemployme­nt, poverty and social injustice.

The recent violence has led to the formation of community, state and regional security outfits that experts say could create bigger problems for Nigeria’s security architectu­re if not properly monitored.

 ?? AP ?? Asabe Philip, 45, lays in Kunji hospital in Southern Kaduna, Nigeria. Philip was severely burned and lost two of her three children in a late March 2023 gunmen attack that left 33 people dead.
AP Asabe Philip, 45, lays in Kunji hospital in Southern Kaduna, Nigeria. Philip was severely burned and lost two of her three children in a late March 2023 gunmen attack that left 33 people dead.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica