34 killed in attack on Nigerian village
Authorities in Nigeria’s central Plateau state said Thursday that 34 people were killed in a brutal attack on Shonong village.
It was a revised deathtoll after the attack earlier this week.
State Information Commissioner Yiljap Abraham said that 34 people were killed, 24 injured and 600 people displaced in the attack by gunmen on Shonong village in Plateau state on Monday.
He added that 56 houses were burned down during the raid.
The state police chief Chris Olakpe had on Tuesday put the death toll at 17, with five of the victims burnt beyond recognition.
Witnesses and survivors described how gunmen attacked the village on Monday in the Riyom area of the state, which along with neighbouring Kaduna has been plagued by communal strife.
The attackers, suspected to be ethnic Fulani herdsmen, also killed or took away animals in the latest outbreak of violence blamed on long-standing ethnic divisions.
Local television stations on Wednesday showed footage of the victims who were given a mass burial.
Human Rights Watch said last month that more than 10,000 people had died in both Plateau and Benue states in brutal tit-for-tat violence since 1992 purely because of their religious or ethnic identity.
Several thousand of those had lost their lives since 2010, the rights monitor added.
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