‘They killed my sons’: chief of Nigerian village where jihadists massacred hundreds recounts night of terror
The traditional chief of a village in western Nigeria where jihadists massacred residents earlier this week has recounted a night of terror during which the attackers killed two of his sons and kidnapped his wife and three daughters. Umar Bio Salihu, the 53-year-old chief of Woro, a small, Muslim-majority village in Kwara state, said that at about 5pm on Tuesday the gunmen “just came in and started shooting”. “All those shops that are within the road, they burnt them … Some people have been burned inside their houses,” he told the Agence France-Presse news agency. “They killed two of (my sons) standing at the front of my house. They took away my second wife with some three (daughters). They are with them presently in the bush.” Salihu survived by hiding in a house, then fled to the neighbouring town of Kaiama, where he has a home, after the attackers left. The attack lasted until 3am, he said. “When the day breaks, the corpses we see, it’s too much,” he said. Woro, a village of several thousand people, sits near a forest region known as a hideout for jihadist fighters and armed gangs. Footage broadcast by local news stations after the attacks on Woro and the neighbouring village of Nuku showed bodies lying in blood on the ground, some with their hands tied, and burning houses. Details are still emerging from the attack, the country’s deadliest so far this year. According to the Red Cross, the death toll stands at 162 people, and the search for bodies is ongoing. Salihu said the jihadists had sent a letter saying they were coming to the village to preach, and went on the rampage when no one attended. Residents separately told Reuters that the attackers had long preached in the village, urging locals to abandon the Nigerian state and adopt sharia rule. The Nigerian president Bola Tinubu has condemned the “beastly attack”, deployed an army battalion to the troubled region, and blamed the Islamist extremist Boko Haram movement – though the name is often used generically for jihadist groups in Nigeria. The attack – described by Amnesty International’s Nigeria office as “a stunning security failure” – was the latest in a series of repeated and widespread acts of violence by jihadists and other armed groups in Nigeria. The country is experiencing a jihadist insurgency in the north-east and north-west, as well as a surge in looting and kidnapping for ransom by armed groups known as “bandits” in the north-west and north-central regions. Experts say that Kwara is fast becoming a new frontier for armed groups seeking to expand in Africa’s most populous country. James Barnett, a researcher at the Washington-based Hudson Institute, told Associated Press armed groups have been going farther afield because they are finding a lot of competition from rival groups in the areas where they traditionally operated. The armed groups in Nigeria include at least two affiliated with Islamic State: an offshoot of Boko Haram known as the Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP), and the lesser-known Islamic State Sahel Province, known locally as Lakurawa. The military has in the past said the Lakurawa has its roots in neighbouring Niger and that it became more active in Nigeria’s border communities after a 2023 military coup. Kwara borders Niger state, which is targeted increasingly by armed groups and is a hotspot where ISWAP and other armed groups have stepped up village attacks and mass kidnappings. Insecurity in Nigeria has been under intense scrutiny in recent months since the US president, Donald Trump, alleged that there was a “genocide” against Christians in the country. The claim has been rejected by the Nigerian government and many independent experts, who say the country’s security crises claim the lives of Christians and Muslims, often without distinction. Elsewhere on Tuesday, unknown gunmen killed at least 13 people in Doma village in the north-western state of Katsina, a police spokesperson said. Agence France-Presse, Reuters and Associated Press contributed to this report







