Fresh waves of killings have swept through Borno, Kaduna and Plateau states, leaving at least 33 persons dead.
In Kaduna State, gunmen killed 10 persons in an attack in Adu village.
The tragedy in Borno occurred yesterday morning when gunmen suspected
 to be Boko Haram’s members attacked a nomadic Shuwa-Arab village and 
shot dead 17 herdsmen.
The village, according to police sources in Maiduguri, is near Damboa
 where suspected Boko Haram gunmen killed 18 local hunters at a market 
early this year.
A resident of Shuwa-Arab, Madina Azaki, said that all the slain 
herdsmen were her relations that had lived and reared cattle in the 
village for over three decades.  
On how the village was attacked, an anonymous resident said: “The 
violence commenced when attackers killed one of our herders and whisked 
away another to an obscure camp located some kilometres away.”
Azaki also said that a day after this, the herdsmen mobilised 
themselves and traced the attackers in order to rescue their abducted 
kinsman.
“When my people approached the camp of the attackers, they were 
ambushed which resulted in the death of 16 people. The victims include 
the district head of Amune, Ba Lamin, who was my uncle. His son, 
Abdallah, was also killed and we strongly believe that the killing was 
carefully planned. Most of the victims were very rich and had no fewer 
than 500 cows,” she said.
According to Madina, the killing marked the end of a generation in the settlement.
“The assailants have wiped out the village because they killed the 
bread-winners. If you go there, you will only see women and young men 
who need help,” she lamented.
The Spokesman of the state Police Command, Gideon Jibrin, said there 
was an attack on one of the villages in Southern Borno, where over a 
dozen herdsmen were slain by armed hoodlums.
He said no arrest had been made by either the Joint Task Force (JTF) or the police.
In Plateau State, the killing of the six persons was done by gunmen 
suspected to be Fulani herdsmen in Kungte village of Jos South Local 
Council.
A source, who spoke with journalists on condition of anonymity, said 
the gunmen stormed the village at the early hours of yesterday and 
opened fire on the residents.
It was learnt that those killed were all from two families. 
Confirming the incident, the state government said it had received 
reports of attacks on some communities in the state with great 
indignation.
This was contained in a statement made available to journalists by 
the Commissioner for Information and Communication, Yiljab Abraham.
The statement reads in parts: “The unprovoked killing of six members 
of two families in their home in Kungte village, Kanadap (near 
Marraraban Jama’a) in Kuru District of Jos South Local Council by gunmen
 yesterday, is an evil and wicked act that should be condemned by all 
members of society.
“It is also a display of cowardice by the perpetrators who under the 
cover of darkness deliberately chose to visit violence on vulnerable 
members of society - women and children to achieve clearly devilish 
designs.”
Abraham added: “Such an attack, coming when the state has been mostly
 peaceful for quite some time, appears a desperate attempt to reverse 
the gains of our efforts in breaking down the barriers of ethnic and 
religious intolerance and thereby rebuilding the bridges of communal 
consensus.
“Such intentions will fail because Plateau people have made up their 
minds to live in peace with one another – and, together with the state 
government and security agencies, they will frustrate every attempt 
aimed at taking the state back to the days of bloodshed and gloom. The 
current level of peace in the state is for consolidation, not 
evaporation.”
The statement further noted that government shared the pains of 
victims of these heinous crimes and declared that those behind such acts
 would face justice in the long run. “We call on communities to remain 
alert always and work closely with security agencies in the sustenance 
of peace,” it said.
information from newsexpressngr.com was used in this report. 

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