81 dead in suspected jihadist raid on northern village

Trucks bring back the bodies of victims of the Mafa attack for their funerals in Yobe, Nigeria, September 3, 2024. STRINGER / REUTERS

At least 81 people have been killed and others are missing after a new jihadist attack in northeastern Nigeria, local authorities said. According to the Yobe state police, about 150 suspected members of the Boko Haram group, armed with firearms and grenades, attacked the village of Mafa on motorcycles on May 1is September around 4 p.m. “We believe this is retaliation for the killing of two Boko Haram terrorists by village vigilante groups.”police spokesman Abdulkarim Dungus told Agence France Presse.

The jihadists have repeatedly accused the inhabitants of Mafa of helping the army in its operations against Boko Haram. The attackers “set fire to the houses, which were mostly thatched dwellings, and those hiding inside were burned alive”said an administrative officer of the local government of Tarmuwa, where Mafa is located, wishing to remain anonymous, after speaking to a resident of Mafa who managed to escape the attack.

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According to Bulama Jalaluddeen, spokesperson for the Tarmuwa local government chairman, 34 bodies were buried in Babban Gida, the local government headquarters of the territory, and thirty others are still in Mafa: “Fifteen bodies had already been buried by their relatives when the soldiers arrived in Mafa for the evacuation of the bodies. And an unknown number of victims from neighboring villages who were caught in the attack were taken and buried by their relatives before the arrival of the soldiers.”

The police have not yet given a death toll. But they believe that Boko Haram has killed “many people and burned many shops and houses” during this attack.

Rural communities plundered and racketeered

Villages in Yobe State, mostly made up of farmers and herders, are often looted or extorted by jihadists from Boko Haram and its rival faction, the Islamic State in West Africa (ISWAP). In recent years, the jihadists have stepped up their attacks in the north of the country on farmers, loggers, herders and fishermen, whom they accuse of providing information to the army and local militias fighting them.

In late October 2023, police, aided by villagers, killed several jihadists near the village of Kayayya, after residents received several threats. In retaliation, the jihadists then killed 37 people in two days in two villages in Yobe State, including 20 who were returning from the funerals of those killed the day before.

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The jihadist insurgency that has lasted for more than fourteen years in the north of the country has already left more than 40,000 dead and more than 2 million displaced. Jihadist fighters from Boko Haram and ISWAP have lost ground in northeastern Nigeria over the years, but continue to attack rural communities. In addition to the jihadist insurgency, Africa’s most populous country, with more than 220 million inhabitants, is also facing powerful criminal gangs, intercommunal fighting and separatist tensions.

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The World with AFP

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