Audio By Carbonatix
The military has been called in to help split up a town in south-east Nigeria after bloody clashes between two communities, the state government says.
A curfew has been declared for three months while hundreds of families are separated and resettled.
Other attempts to prevent people from the Ezza and Ezillo communities in Ebonyi State fighting over land rights have failed, the authorities said.
At least 18 people have been killed over the last five months.
"People in the area are tired of the fighting," Ken Zegede Uhuo, Ebonyi State's information commissioner, told the BBC.
"They are willing to make sacrifices for peace."
The BBC's Abdusalam Ahmad reports there have been intermarriages between the two communities.
People will be separated according to their father's ethnicity, our correspondent says.
Limited land rights
The military has moved into the area and will enforce a curfew at the request of Governor Martin Elechi.
The Ezza are being relocated to a place called Eguachara, a few kilometres away from Ezillo town.
The clashes began when the Ezza people moved to the area in the late 1950s, state authorities said.
In Nigeria, migrant communities have limited rights to land, even years after they settle in new areas.
The latest round of killings started in May, when an argument broke out over which community controlled a local market, the local media reported.
At least 10,000 people have been killed in communal clashes in Nigeria in the last decade.
Correspondents say many are prompted by politicians who use hired thugs to stir ethnic or religious tension.
Source: BBC
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
AIMS Ghana, University of Waterloo lead push for stronger mathematics education at HTTMC 2026
2 minutes -
NADMO dismisses claims residents were not warned before Weija Dam spillage
2 hours -
Government begins payment of 2020 batch of nurses and midwives arrears
2 hours -
Controversial anti-LGBTQ bill presented to Parliament for second reading
2 hours -
Deloitte Partner urges clear, consistent policies to govern mining license renewals, local content
2 hours -
Xenophobic attacks: Ghana must pursue justice for victims beyond evacuation – Bosome Freho MP
2 hours -
BOPP positions sustainable agribusiness as investment frontier
2 hours -
Ga Mantse demands action against chiefs selling lands on waterways
2 hours -
South African Tourism condemns anti-immigrant attacks, reassures African travellers
2 hours -
APSU 2002 Year Group announces key leadership appointments for 97th anniversary hosting & BOLT Steering Committee
3 hours -
Government backs hybrid model for Ghana’s extractive sector, rejects move to shut out foreign investors
3 hours -
LMWG commends Heath Goldfields on 5-year community development plan for Prestea
3 hours -
Eswatini champions SiSwati stories in digital age at World Book Day 2026
3 hours -
Only weak men forgive cheating partner – Yul Edochie
3 hours -
Meta repeatedly snubs EU body over Facebook and Instagram user bans
3 hours