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Nigeria brings home 12,000 displaced people despite instability

Nigeria has brought home around 12,000 people who fled violence in the northwest of the country earlier this year, including from neighbouring Niger, an official and a returnee said Wednesday. The official said improved security had prompted their return to Shimfida village in Katsina state near the Nigerien border, but criminal gangs known locally as…
Internally displaced women and children gather at an IDP camp in the Garga Village in the Kanam Local Government Area of the Plateau state on April 12, 2022 after their houses were burnt down in the Kukawa Village during an attack by bandits. – President Muhammadu Buhari vowed on April 12, 2022 there would be no mercy for those behind the killings of more than a hundred people in a series of attacks in central Nigeria.
Gunmen raided and ransacked a group of villages there, local sources said, in one of worst attacks this year blamed on heavily armed criminal gangs.
Condemning what he called the “heinous” killings, Buhari promised that the perpetrators would receive “no mercy”. (Photo by AFP)

Nigeria has brought home around 12,000 people who fled violence in the northwest of the country earlier this year, including from neighbouring Niger, an official and a returnee said Wednesday.

The official said improved security had prompted their return to Shimfida village in Katsina state near the Nigerien border, but criminal gangs known locally as bandits continue to terrorise communities in the wider region despite military operations against them.

On Monday, more than 8,000 people boarded buses outside a makeshift camp at a public school in Jibia to go home to Shimfida, after fleeing months earlier following raids by bandits, Jibia political administrator Bashir Sabi’u said.

More than 4,000 were being brought home to the same village from Maradi in Niger.

“We have returned more than 12,000… to Shimfida village following (the) return of relative peace in the area,” he said.

“These include 4,700 who sought refuge in Maradi across the border in Niger.”

An official in Niger’s Maradi said the “voluntary returns” had started on Sunday after what the Nigerian authorities described as improved security.

“They have informed us that they are progressively returning people home,” said Mahamane Laouali Ibrahim, prefect of Maradi’s Madarounfa district.

Nigeria’s ministry of humanitarian affairs did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Over the past two years, violence has displaced almost one million people in northwest and central Nigeria, while an additional 80,000 have fled across the border to Niger.

Ibrahim Mairodi, a father of 11, was among those who returned to Shimfida this week.

The 42-year-old farmer said he and his neighbours found their homes partly destroyed and empty.

The bandits removed the roofing, doors and windows of all the houses in the village, “leaving them bare”, he said.

“The state government has replaced the roofing sheets, but the houses are still without doors and windows, and we have no money to buy them.”

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