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Tuesday, April 14, 2026 | Daily Newspaper published by GPPC Doha, Qatar.

Tag Results for "Gunmen" (3 articles)

A Nigerian military vehicle is stationed at the scene of an attack, the morning after gunmen killed multiple people in an overnight attack in Angwan Rukuba, Jos North, Plateau State, Nigeria, Monday. (Reuters)
International

Gunmen open fire in Nigeria university neighbourhood, mob retaliates

Gunmen opened fire on a bar in Jos, the capital of Nigeria's restive Plateau state, sparking retaliation from a mob and killing nearly three dozen people in all, local sources said Monday.Plateau state, in central Nigeria's Middle Belt region, experiences recurring violence in the countryside, mostly linked to land disputes between farmers and herders.Jos, a religiously mixed city, has seen sectarian violence but deadly, mass casualty attacks in the crowded capital have been rare in recent years.It was unclear how many people were killed in the Sunday evening shooting in a Jos neighbourhood popular with local university students and staff and how many were killed in the ensuing mob retaliation.At least 12 people were killed when unidentified attackers opened fire at a bar-cum-restaurant in the Anguwan Rukuba neighbourhood, in the Jos North district, said Plateau state Red Cross secretary Nurudeen Hussaini Magaji.He later updated the death toll from the shooting and the mob retaliation to 33, without breaking down how many were killed in each incident."The attackers shot people at a joint," said Mangalle Idris, a local youth leader.Then a mob formed, Idris said, and "attacked people that were either passing or doing business and they killed them."After initially listing the death toll from the mob at 10, he revised that number down to three, with 30 people killed in the gunfire."Mob action killed three passersby, two of them were burnt beyond recognition," he said.The University of Jos said the attack, "and the consequential tensions it has generated", prompted it to postpone exams scheduled for Monday and Tuesday.The state government said investigations were "ongoing", without giving a toll or naming suspects, and ordered a curfew in Jos North from Sunday to Wednesday.That same evening as the Plateau attack, unidentified gunmen in the northwestern state of Kaduna killed 13 people at a pre-wedding bachelor party, local and security sources told AFP.Nigeria's northwest suffers from rural organised crime gangs, locally called "bandits", which kidnap, kill and extort citizens.In the Plateau state countryside, farmers and herders have been clashing for years over land access, sometimes erupting into massacres where entire villages are emptied out.Because the violence falls across ethnic lines, some -- including politicians in both Nigeria and the United States -- have characterised the killings as religiously driven, a view rejected by most experts.Violence has been rare in recent years in Jos, said Malik Samuel, an Abuja-based researcher at the nonprofit Good Governance Africa.However the city saw deadly sectarian riots in 2001 and 2008 that killed hundreds across religious lines, and remains "a keg of gunpowder", he said.Samuel said the government was smart to quickly institute a curfew, to halt further reprisals."But having a clear identity and motive of the perpetrators will go a long way to dousing whatever tension is simmering in the city," he added.Posts on social media after the Anguwan Rukuba attack variously blamed -- without evidence -- on herders or "bandits" for targeting a community on Palm Sunday.The Plateau chapter of Jama'atu Nasril Islam, a Nigerian civil society group, called the attacks a "grave threat to peace and coexistence"."We urge all citizens to exercise restraint. We must not allow anger and grief to push us into actions that could worsen the situation," it said.Researchers blame Plateau state's current, mostly rural, crisis on climate change, illegal mining and population growth squeezing available land.Impunity for killings across rural areas largely abandoned by the state often spark recurrent reprisals.Local politicians are also known to inflame tensions in Plateau, where the question of which ethnic groups are "indigenous" to the land is politically sensitive. 

Gunmen pick up the belongings left behind by worshippers who ran for cover after hearing gunshots, as they walk into a Church in Eruku, Kwara state, Nigeria, November 18, 2025, Reuters
International

Gunmen attack church in Nigeria, killing two and kidnapping others

Nicki Minaj calls for global action on religious freedomAttack adds pressure on Nigerian government amid US scrutinyKwara governor requests more security after church attackGunmen have attacked a church in Nigeria, killing at least two people and kidnapping the pastor and some worshippers, police and witnesses said Wednesday, days after 25 girls were abducted from a boarding school.The attack on Tuesday evening in Eruku, a town in central Nigeria's Kwara state, puts more pressure on the government, which is under scrutiny from US President Donald Trump who has threatened military action over what he says is persecution of Christians.President Bola Tinubu postponed a planned trip to South Africa and Angola for G20 and AU-EU summits to receive security briefings on the two attacks, and ordered more security to hunt down the assailants in Kwara, his office said.The president also directed the security agencies "to do everything possible" to rescue the schoolgirls, "abducted by the bandits and bring the girls back home safe", his spokesperson Bayo Onanuga said. Rapper Nicki Minaj appealed on Tuesday for global action to defend religious freedom. Speaking at the US mission to the UN, the Trinidad-born artist, who lives in New York, said that in Nigeria "Christians are being targeted, driven from their homes and killed".Nigeria is grappling with an insurgency in the northeast, abductions and killings by armed gangs mainly in the northwest and deadly clashes between mainly herdsmen and mostly farmers in its central belt. The government says the US designation of Nigeria as "a country of particular concern" misrepresents its complex security challenges and does not take into account its efforts to safeguard freedom of religion for all.In the latest attack, police responded to gunfire at around 6pm on Tuesday and discovered one person fatally shot inside the church and another in a nearby bush, said Adetoun Ejire-Adeyemi, police spokesperson for Kwara state. Witnesses said they counted at least three dead church members. "They later rounded up some worshippers, including the pastor, and took them into the bush," parishioner Joseph Bitrus told Reuters by phone, without saying how many were taken.A video posted by a local news outlet and verified by Reuters showed the Christ Apostolic Church service being interrupted by gunfire, forcing parishioners to take cover. Armed men are seen entering and taking people's belongings as gunshots continue.The governor of Kwara asked for the immediate deployment of more security operatives following the church attack, his spokesperson said. Authorities have not yet located the girls abducted by armed men who stormed the Government Girls Comprehensive Secondary School in northwestern Kebbi state on Monday. Vice President Kashim Shettima was expected to travel to the state to meet officials and parents.

Gulf Times
International

Gunmen kill 1, kidnap 18 in attack on Nigerian village

Gunmen attacked a village in Zamfara State, northwestern Nigeria, killing a man, wounding his wife, and kidnapping 18 people, all women and children.Residents said the attackers belonged to gangs known for kidnapping and cattle-rustling, and stormed Birnin Zarma village early in the morning as residents were preparing for dawn prayers."The bandits attacked the village around 5 a.m. while people were preparing for morning prayers," Birnin Zarma resident Ibrahim Bello said. "They broke into a house and shot dead a man and injured his wife before herding 18 women and children out of the village."Lawal Umar, a resident of the neighboring town of Bukkuyum, said the attackers were believed to be from the neighboring Anka district, where they maintain camps in a nearby forest.He added that forces stationed in Bukkuyum were unable to repel the attack due to the flooding of a river separating the town from the village of Birnin Zarma, which prevented the timely arrival of security reinforcements.Birnin Zarma is located about 170 km from the state capital, Gusau, and residents are still waiting for a ransom demand from the kidnappers for the release of the hostages.For years, the states of northwestern and central Nigeria, particularly Zamfara, have witnessed a wave of violence perpetrated by armed gangs known locally as "bandits," who have recently intensified their attacks on rural villages.