logo
Nigerian president orders crackdown on gangs after 150 killed in conflict-hit north

Nigerian president orders crackdown on gangs after 150 killed in conflict-hit north

ABUJA, Nigeria (AP) — Nigeria's President Bola Tinubu on Wednesday directed security agencies to hunt down the perpetrators of a weekend attack that killed at least 150 people in the country's northcentral, as he faces growing pressure over a worsening security crisis.
Tinubu visited Benue state, the site of the recent deadly attacks, seeking to calm tensions and promise justice for the victims. 'We will restore peace, rebuild, and bring the perpetrators to justice. You are not alone.' the Nigerian leader said on X.
Assailants stormed Benue state's Yelewata community from Friday night till Saturday morning, opening fire on villagers who were asleep and setting their homes ablaze, survivors and the local farmers union said. Many of those killed were sheltering in a local market after fleeing violence in other parts of the state.
Authorities in Benue state blamed herdsmen for the attack, a type of violence frequently seen in northern Nigeria's decadeslong pastoral conflict.
Opposition leaders and critics have accused Tinubu of a delayed response to the killings, noting his office issued a statement over 24 hours after the attack. His visit to the state occurred five days later.
The Nigerian leader traveled to Makurdi, Benue State's capital, where he visited a hospital to see those injured in the attack and met with local leaders to discuss how to end the killings. He did not visit the Yelewata community.
He also appeared to reprimand the police for not making any arrest yet more than four days after the killings.
'How come no arrest has been made? I expect there should be an arrest of those criminals,' Tinubu asked as he addressed senior police officers during a gathering in Benue.
Analysts blame Nigeria's worsening security crisis on a lack of political will to go after criminals and ensure justice for victims.
'In the end, the result is the same: No justice, no accountability, and no closure for the victims and their communities,' said Senator Iroegbu, a security analyst based in Nigeria's capital Abuja. 'Until this changes, impunity will remain the norm, and such tragedies will continue to occur.'
____
Follow AP's Africa coverage at: https://apnews.com/hub/africa

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Family remembers daughter who died in 2021 crash as DUI case approaches end
Family remembers daughter who died in 2021 crash as DUI case approaches end

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Family remembers daughter who died in 2021 crash as DUI case approaches end

HUNTSVILLE, Ala. (WHNT) — A mother who has waited years for justice after her daughter was killed in a 2021 crash by an accused drunk driver says a chapter is closing on the case. 24-year-old Hannah Parton and 47-year-old Arlene Velasquez were killed in the crash. 'We love you': Family of missing Albertville teen desperate for answers 'You know, she just was that soft-natured young lady that wanted everyone to do well,' Sheila Smith said about her daughter Hannah. Smith said the families waited almost a year to see movement in the case. In October 2022, Jacob Stephens was charged with reckless murder and driving under the influence. 'It's easy to get bitter,' Smith said. 'It's easy to feel like you're being ignored. It's just hard. You know, losing Hannah was hard enough. It's still so hard.' Stephens is set to go to trial next week, but it is possible he will never appear in front of a jury. Smith said the District Attorney's Office told her Stephens is expected to take a plea deal. 📲 to stay updated on the go. 📧 to have news sent to your inbox. 'I've also done a lot of research in three and a half years waiting for justice, and I feel like it's probably the best outcome,' Smith said. Smith said no amount of prison time Stephens could serve would bring her daughter back. After years of grief, she wants to find a sense of normalcy in her life, living each day for Hannah. 'A lot has been lifted after three and a half years of complete chaos and uncertainty,' Smith said. 'Heartbreak. The continued heartbreak. Yeah, it's nice to finally be able to put it to a close.' The Madison County District Attorney's Office told News 19 that plea discussions have focused on Stephens serving 30 years in prison. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Palestinian activist Mahmoud Khalil is released after spending over three months at a Louisiana detention center
Palestinian activist Mahmoud Khalil is released after spending over three months at a Louisiana detention center

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Palestinian activist Mahmoud Khalil is released after spending over three months at a Louisiana detention center

Mahmoud Khalil – a Palestinian activist at the center of a long-running deportation fight – has been released from the Louisiana ICE detention center where he has spent more than three months after he was arrested outside his apartment on Columbia University's campus, his attorneys said. Wearing a keffiyeh – a scarf seen as a symbol of Palestinian identity and resistance – a grinning Khalil pumped his fists as he walked out of the detention center Friday evening with one of his attorneys. Since March, he had been detained at an Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in the rural town of Jena, Louisiana. 'Although justice prevailed but it's long, very long overdue, and this shouldn't have taken three months,' Khalil told reporters outside the detention center, adding he couldn't wait to reunite with his wife and newborn son. Judge Michael Farbiarz ordered Khalil's release on bail Friday after finding he is not a flight risk or a danger to public safety. The judge said it's 'highly unusual' to be seeking his detention at this point. The judge also cited several 'extraordinary circumstances' in Khalil's case that led him to order his release, including 'that there is a due process violative effort to punish' the Columbia University graduate who played a central role in negotiations on behalf of pro-Palestinian student protesters last year. Khalil 'is not a flight risk, and the evidence that has been presented to me at least is that he is not a danger to the community, period, full stop,' Farbiarz said. Khalil, a lawful permanent resident who is married to a US citizen and has not been charged with a crime, was one of the first arrestees in the Trump administration's immigration crackdown targeting student activism. As his case dragged on for over 100 days, several other student activists targeted for deportation by the Trump administration were released. Khalil said he is leaving behind immigrants still in detention who are 'in a place where they shouldn't have been.' 'The Trump administration are doing their best to dehumanize everyone here,' he said. 'Whether you are a US citizen, an immigrant or just a person on this land, doesn't mean that you are less of a human.' Khalil's wife, Noor Abdalla, said in a statement that she can 'breathe a sigh of relief' knowing that Khalil will be reunited with his family after missing the birth of his first child during months of detention at a facility over 1,000 miles away. Judge Farbiarz previously ruled the government can't hold Khalil on the premise that his presence in the country is against the national interest, and on Friday found that Khalil doesn't need to be detained based on a second allegation against him that he failed to give required information in his application to become a legal permanent resident of the US. 'It's overwhelmingly unlikely, I found, that a lawful permanent resident would be detained on the remaining available charge' of failing to accurately fill out an immigration application, the judge said during Friday's hearing. At the hearing, Khalil's attorneys argued that the court should allow him to be released on bail or transferred to a detention center closer to his wife and newborn son. They said the chilling effect of his detention has made it an 'extraordinary case.' 'I'm aware, of my 20 years of representing immigrants, of no other case where the government announced the day that it detained someone that they were detaining them in order to send a message that their arrest would be the first of many, that they were going after student protesters,' Khalil's attorney Alina Das argued before the court. The federal government requested to temporarily halt Khalil's release, which the judge denied Friday. 'The court concluded there's no reason he should continue to be detained given the serious harms that are happening, the chill that is happening to his speech and other people's speech as a result of his detention,' one of his attorneys Baher Azmy told CNN Friday. In response to the ruling, the Department of Homeland Security said that 'The Trump Administration acted well within its statutory and constitutional authority to detain Khalil.' As the case played out in immigration and federal courts, the administration has argued that Khalil should be deported because his presence in the United States threatens the administration's foreign policy goal of combatting antisemitism. His lawyers contended that he was targeted for his pro-Palestinian views in violation of his constitutional rights. 'There is at least something to the underlying claim that there is an effort to use the immigration charge here to punish the petitioner. And of course, that would be unconstitutional,' Farbiarz said Friday. As part of his release conditions, Khalil's lawyers were required to surrender his passport to immigration authorities in Louisiana and he was prohibited from traveling internationally, limiting travel to a handful of states. The government was ordered to provide Khalil his green card and a copy of his passport, allowing him to board a plane home to New York Friday. Khalil will however not have to report to US Immigration and Customs Enforcement in New York, Magistrate Judge Michael Hammer ordered. Though he's been released, Khalil's immigration proceedings will continue. Azmy, Khalil's attorney, said the legal team learned immigration Judge Jamee Comans in Louisiana separately reaffirmed her removability ruling an hour into Friday's hearing. Khalil's lawyers will appeal her decision through immigration court – a long process his lawyers say will be easier now that he is out of detention. 'I'm confident that on appeal, we will prevail,' Johnny Sinodis, one of Khalil's attorneys, told CNN's Laura Coates Friday, noting Khalil's insistence throughout court proceedings that he 'committed no misrepresentation, no fraud' during his green card application. Khalil's wife said the ruling doesn't begin to address the injustices their family has been through but said she's 'celebrating Mahmoud coming back to New York to be reunited with our little family, and the community that has supported us since the day he was unjustly taken for speaking out for Palestinian freedom.' The ruling comes exactly one week after Farbiarz ruled Khalil can remain in detention. After the judge said the government could no longer hold Khalil on the premise that his presence in the country is against the national interest, attorneys for the Department of Justice said the judge's decision did not prevent them from continuing to hold Khalil on a second claim – that he failed to give required information in his application to become a legal permanent resident of the US. The judge ruled last week that the administration's interpretation of his order is correct, keeping Khalil in detention. Khalil's attorneys at the time accused the administration of using 'cruel, transparent delay tactics' to keep Khalil in custody. Azmy on Friday said the charges still pending that Khalil made misrepresentations on his green card application are 'baseless' and will be litigated. When asked if Khalil will continue to protest when released, Azmy said: 'He's a peace activist, he's an international human rights activist, and he's Palestinian, and I don't expect he will ever stop advocating for justice for Palestinian people and an end to their continued slaughter and starvation.' This story has been updated with additional information. CNN's Gloria Pazmino contributed to this report.

Grandfather pens letter to PM after death in custody
Grandfather pens letter to PM after death in custody

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Grandfather pens letter to PM after death in custody

The grandfather of a 24-year-old man who died in custody has drafted an open letter to the prime minister calling on Canberra to step in and address "madness" in the Northern Territory's justice system. The senior Warlpiri leader and kin of Kumanjayi White, who died after being forcibly restrained by two plain clothes officers inside a supermarket in Alice Springs in May, said justice in the Territory was "in crisis". "Your government in Canberra has total power over the NT," Ned Jampijinpa Hargraves, a Yuendumu man, wrote. "The prisons are so full they need private security guards; guards on buses and public housing officers are being given guns - this madness must stop." The letter addressed to Prime Minister Anthony Albanese landed ahead of protests in Sydney and Alice Springs on Saturday to demand justice for Mr White. The senior Indigenous leader renewed his call for an independent investigation into the death of his grandson. The family has also been calling for the release of CCTV footage and for the officers involved to be stood down while the investigation takes place. Federal minister for Indigenous Australians, Malarndirri McCarthy, backs an independent inquiry but despite broad support, the NT government has rejected the proposal, saying NT Police are best-placed to investigate the death. Police allege Mr White, who had a mental disability and was in care, was shoplifting and assaulted a security guard. In his letter, Mr Hargraves demanded immediate action from the Commonwealth, including withholding funding to the NT government until it agreed to an independent probe. "You used this power to take away all our rights, our jobs and our assets with the NT Intervention 18 years ago today," he said. "Now we demand action from Canberra to see that our rights are restored and we are protected from the racist Country Liberal Party government." Speaking ahead of a meeting of the Joint Council on Closing the Gap in Darwin on Friday, Senator McCarthy said deaths in custody had to end and the federal government was deeply concerned about the issue. The Yuendumu community also lost 19-year-old Kumanjayi Walker in 2019 when he was shot by then-NT police officer Zachary Rolfe during a botched arrest. Mr Rolfe was found not guilty of all charges over the death in 2022. Protesters in Sydney gathered to respond to a policing conference involving the former police officer but the first responders event has since been cancelled, according to the rally organisers.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store