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Nigeria imposes curfew after 70 killed in communal clashes

Pall bearers carry coffins during the funeral service for people killed during clashes between mostly Muslim cattle herders and Christian farmers in the Benue state capital Makurdi, Nigeria, Jan. 11, 2018.
Pall bearers carry coffins during the funeral service for people killed during clashes between mostly Muslim cattle herders and Christian farmers in the Benue state capital Makurdi, Nigeria, Jan. 11, 2018. PIUS UTOMI EKPEI/AFP/Getty Images

Nigeria imposed a dusk to dawn curfew on Sunday in central Plateau state after at least 70 people died in communal clashes between farmers and semi-nomadic herders over the weekend.

Strife in the decades-old conflict has escalated sharply this year, particularly in the ethnically and religiously diverse hinterland states known as the Middle Belt, causing more deaths than the Boko Haram insurgency in Nigeria’s northeast.

“The government has enforced a curfew from 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. in order to bring normalcy, (and) police and other security operatives have been put on alert at the moment,” Plateau State’s Commissioner of Information Yakubu Dati told Reuters.

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Communal violence between herders and farmers, which originated partly over dwindling fertile land, has spiralled into a cycle of violence and reprisal attacks that has killed hundreds of people this year in the Middle Belt.

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READ MORE: 45 dead in attack on northern Nigerian village

Insecurity has become a major electoral problem for President Muhammadu Buhari, who plans to seek re-election in February and who won power on pledges to deliver peace and stability.

“This further strengthens my constant call for an overhaul of the entire security apparatus of this country,” Yakubu Dogara, the leader of Nigeria’s lower house of parliament, said in a statement on Sunday.

“It just isn’t working,” he said, adding that the violence posed a serious threat to Nigeria’s democracy.

Buhari’s party rejects criticism that his administration is soft-peddling justice for the herders, who belong to the same Fulani ethnic group as the president.

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