No fewer than 44
others were also kidnapped in the region amidst the rising insecurity across
the country.
According to a
security report by the Council on Foreign Relations, Kaduna State recorded the
highest number of cases with six incidents of killing and kidnapping while
Katsina State, where President Muhammadu Buhari hails from, had four incidents.
The Council of
Foreign Relations, an American think-thank, said it tracks insecurity across
Nigeria “using information from newspapers and families of victims of various
violent attacks”.
Breakdown
In its breakdown,
the report revealed that on July 23, unknown herders killed seven people in
Kaduna’s Kajuru, and on the following day, July 24, bandits killed 10 persons
in Jema’a and Kaura LGAs of Kaduna.
On July 18, six
people were abducted in Chikun, Kaduna State while suspected herders killed 11
people in Zangon Kataf in the same state on July 20.
It also revealed
that on July 19, suspected herders killed 21 persons and a police inspector in
Kaura while a sectarian violence caused the death of three in Kauru, Kaduna on
July 21.
According to CFR, a
bomb explosion killed six children in Malumfashi, Katsina, on July 18 while 23
Nigerian soldiers and 17 bandits were killed in Jibia on same day – in the same
state.
Days after, bandits
killed another three in Batsari town of Katsina on July 21 and kidnapped 17
residents on July 22 in Safana town of the state.
It said Boko Haram
insurgents on July 22 killed five aid workers in Borno State. The group killed
three in Chibok town of the state on the same day.
On July 20, a
military airstrike killed at least 10 bandits in Talata-Mafara, Zamfara State
while they repeated the same action on no fewer than 10 bandits in
Birnin-Magaji/Kiyawa of the state on July 23.
Two vigilantes were
killed by their abductors in Gassol, Taraba State on July 19 while a joint task
force killed four kidnappers in Lokoja, Kogi State on the same day.
The report also said
16 people were abducted on the same July 19 in Rafi, Niger State and another
five kidnapped in Jada area of Adamawa State.
Worsening insecurity, adamant presidency
On several
occasions, President Muhammadu Buhari, a retired army general, has met with
service chiefs to discuss the rising security challenges in the country. Their
efforts have failed to curb the sporadic bloodletting across the country.
Numerous calls for
their replacement have also been ignored by the president.
In one of the
meetings a few months ago, the president threatened that he would not hesitate
to replace any of the service chiefs who is “under performing”.
Not pleased with the
rate of killings in the country – particularly the northern part, the Senate
last week called for the removal of all the service chiefs over incessant
killings especially after a PREMIUM TIMES’ report on how hundreds of soldiers
quit their jobs over ‘loss of interest’.
The presidency, in a
swift reaction, said the Senate has no such powers to call for their removal –
a rebuttal that sparked uproar on social media.
On Monday, the Chief
of Army Staff, Tukur Buratai, stunned many when he said Nigeria is now safer
than it was five years ago.
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