Audio By Carbonatix
A northeastern Nigerian state was under a 24-hour curfew Saturday following three days of violence that left more than 30 Christians dead.
The curfew was placed in effect as fears rose that Christian youths could launch reprisal attacks, said Tomborokai Gajere, chaplain to the Adamawa state government.
On Friday, 11 men and one woman were killed in the city of Yola.
The militant Islamist group Boko Haram has claimed or been blamed for a recent spate of sectarian attacks.
On Thursday, it was reported that 17 people, all Christians, were killed while mourning the deaths of two others who were killed the day before. These attacks happened in the city of Mubi. Daniels said the official number of deaths was just 12, with four injuries.
Gajere said he personally pleaded with Christian youths in Numan, which is near Mubi, for calm amid reports that reprisal attacks were possible.
Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan condemned the recent attacks in a speech to the nation Saturday, saying such "mindless acts of violence ... are unfortunate."
"I urge all Nigerians to eschew bitterness and acrimony and live together in harmony and peace. Wherever there is any threat to public peace, our security agencies will enforce the law, without fear or favor," Jonathan said.
Boko Haram has been blamed for months of widespread bloodshed in Nigeria, with churches and police stations among the targets.
The group also claimed responsibility for a series of attacks on churches on Christmas Day.
The latest sectarian attack comes as Nigeria also faces a nationwide wave of popular protests over the removal of a gas subsidy that had kept prices artificially low. Police have responded forcefully by making many arrests, an effort that has contributed to at least one death.
Jonathan's speech Saturday defended the decision to remove the subsidy.
"My fellow Nigerians, the truth is that we are all faced with two basic choices with regard to the management of the downstream petroleum sector: Either we deregulate and survive economically, or we continue with a subsidy regime that will continue to undermine our economy and potential for growth and face serious consequences," he said.
He acknowledged that deregulating the oil sector is "not a magic formula," though he said "it provides a good entry point for transforming the economy, and for ensuring transparency and competitiveness in the oil industry, which is the mainstay of our economy."
Jonathan added that a committee will be established to oversee the removal of the gas subsidy "to ensure that the funds ... are spent prudently on projects that will build a greater Nigeria."
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
-
GN Savings and Loans could resume operations before end of 2026 — Dr Kweku Nduom
11 minutes -
Telecel CEO speaks on closing Africa’s gender gap in technology at Rwandan summit
16 minutes -
Analysis: Why the cedi is depreciating
1 hour -
What are they hiding? – Tech consultant questions rush for 15 digital bills
1 hour -
To nationalise or transform? Joy Business hosts roundtable on Ghana’s extractive future
1 hour -
This is not how modern innovation ecosystems are built – Tech analyst warns over NITA Bill
2 hours -
A web developer could become a criminal – NITA Bill sparks fear among young innovators
2 hours -
Mercy Johnson faces backlash over $18.24 menstrual kit
2 hours -
EU plans to fine Google high triple-digit million euro sum, Handelsblatt reports
2 hours -
Senegal’s Faye names economist Lo as new prime minister
2 hours -
Landslide at Angola illegal gold mine kills 28
3 hours -
The Draft NITA Bill should be shredded
3 hours -
Eni and partners approve new development phase for Ivory Coast project
3 hours -
Gov’t signals tougher scrutiny before renewing Gold Fields’ Tarkwa lease, Reuters report
3 hours -
Africa must build strong systems to achieve sporting success — Herbert Mensah
3 hours