Police in Nigeria say they’re trying to find 21 folks kidnapped by gunmen whereas engaged on farmland whose proprietor is believed to have owed the alleged kidnappers coerced funds.
Police in Nigeria are trying to find 21 folks kidnapped by gunmen whereas engaged on farmland whose proprietor is believed to have owed the alleged kidnappers coerced funds.
Katsina state police spokesperson Gambo Isah mentioned on Thursday that the folks kidnapped have been youngsters engaged on a farm within the distant Faskari council space of the state when the gunmen “singled out the farm and kidnapped them”.
“In accordance with our investigation, the bandits positioned some levies on a few of these farmers, and this specific one refused to adjust to their calls for,” Isah mentioned. “That was why they went to their farm and kidnapped the employees,” Isah mentioned.
Police and Nigerian troopers from a close-by army outpost have been working to seek out the kidnapped farm staff, who’re ages 15-18, he mentioned.
Residents in distant components of the northwest and central areas of Nigeria focused by armed teams have complained of gunmen requiring farmers to pay enormous levies to work their farmland.
Katsina, the house state of President Muhammadu Buhari, has been one of many sizzling spots within the abduction scourge.
The teams initially consisted of younger males from the Fulani ethnic group, whose members historically labored as nomadic cattle herders and are caught up in a decades-long battle with Hausa farming communities over entry to water and grazing land.
However consultants say a number of armed teams at the moment are profiting from the state of affairs to practise banditry in these areas, too.
Nigerian safety forces perform aerial bombardments of the recognized hideouts of the armed teams. Authorities blame their continued operation on the cooperation of some native residents.
Most of these residents are farmers who say they threat getting attacked if they don’t pay the levies imposed on their villages.
The police are “fearful and disturbed that terrorists are putting levies on folks”, police spokesperson Isah mentioned. He mentioned villagers should nonetheless “desist from cooperating and from no matter calls for made by these terrorists”.