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Residents claim that gunmen killed at least 20 peoples in a mining village in Nigeria's Zamfara State

Residents and Amnesty International reported that gunmen killed at least twenty people in a raid on a gold-mining village in the northwestern state of Zamfara in Nigeria.

The motive of the attack was not immediately clear, but Zamfara has been plagued by kidnappings and ransoms committed by armed groups who target both security forces.

The spokesperson for the Zamfara Police did not respond immediately to a request for comment.

Ismail Hassan told a resident that gunmen opened fire in their hundreds on miners in the village of Gobirawa Chali, in the Maru Local Government Area of Zamfara State, on Thursday afternoon. A firefight followed, with more than 20 people dying in the mining community of Gobirawa Chali.

Isah Ibrahim, a resident of the area, reported that they recovered 21 bodies and several injured following the attack.

Amnesty International stated in a press release that the gunmen killed over 20 people in Gobirawa Chali by going house to house.

In the last two years, armed gangs of men who operate from remote forests have murdered and kidnapped hundreds in northwest Nigeria. Armed forces in the country are stretched thin and have had difficulty securing large remote areas.

Insecurity in Nigeria is causing the military to be stretched. This includes an Islamist insurgency, farmer-herder conflicts in the central belt, and separatist movements in southern Nigeria. Reporting by Ahmed Kingimi, Writing by Chijioke Ahuocha, Editing by Alexandra Hudson

(source: Reuters)