30 die in Nigeria village attacks
Thursday, 3 July 2014
Suspected Islamists sprayed gunfire at worshippers and torched four churches on Sunday in a Nigerian village close to the town from where more than 200 schoolgirls were kidnapped, according to witnesses. At least 30 bodies were recovered but more were still being found in the bushes, where people from Kwada village had been hiding, said a member of a vigilante group that has had some successes in repelling attacks. ‘They killed dozens of people and burned houses after attacking worshippers,’ survivour Mallam Yahi said by telephone from Chibok town. The church buildings destroyed included the Protestant Church of Christ, the Pentecostal Deeper Life Bible Church and Ekklesiyar Yan’uwa, which is Hausa for Church of the Brethren in Nigeria, Yahi said. The last was started by American missionaries from Illinois in the 1920s. Yahi said the attackers went on to neighbouring Kautikari, where they shot at villagers and burned homes. The vigilante said they had not yet reached Kautikari so did not know the death toll there. A police spokesman, Gideon Jubrin, said he could not confirm the attack because bad communications had kept officials from reaching the nearest security post at Chibok. Chibok is the town in the north-east state of Borno from where more than 200 girls were abducted in April by Boko Haram militants. Officials say 219 girls remain captive. Kwada is six miles and Kautikari four miles from Chibok, according to a news agency.