Robyn Dixon of the Los Angeles Times is reporting that 20 more women have been abducted by in a remote settlement in Northeast Nigeria. Dixon writes:
“The latest abductions follow dozens of kidnappings, attacks on villages and slayings of schoolboys and teachers since last year.
The 20 women were from the Fulani ethnic group, traditionally cattle herders, taken from the Garkin Fulani settlement, according to a member of a local vigilante group, Alhaji Tar, the Associated Press reported.
No group claimed responsibility for the mass kidnapping, although it bore similarities to Boko Haram operations and the group was suspected.
Details of the attack are sketchy, but Tar said the gunmen drove up to the settlement at noon Thursday, ordered the women into vehicles at gunpoint and drove them off. They also took three men who tried to prevent them from taking the women.
News of the abduction took several days to emerge, because insurgents have attacked mobile phone base stations in recent years, meaning it can take days for news to filter out.”
Monday marked the 41st day that the schoolgirls abducted by Boko Haram have been missing.
Read more at The Los Angeles Times.
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