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Gunmen kill 100 people in Nigeria, leaving behind charred corpses and shattered lifes

Fidelis Adidi was chased out of Yelwata, a village in central Nigeria by gunmen who attacked at night. He returned the next morning to find one of his wives and four children charred.

The two had been living together in a room that he had rented at the market to protect them from the clashes in the Middle Belt area of the country between farmers and cattle herders.

Amnesty International reports that the attack, which began Friday night, resulted in around 100 deaths in the Benue town.

The 37-year old told the audience that his body was weak and that his heart kept racing as he stood in the hallway, assessing the damage. "I lost five members of my family."

In a separate room, the blackened remains of farm equipment and food were piled up next to bodies that had been burned beyond recognition.

The authorities have been struggling to control the violence, which has simmered over years due to competition for land and ethnic and religious divisions.

Bola Tinubu, the president of Nigeria who has been in office for two years, is scheduled to visit Benue tomorrow.

The National Emergency Management Agency of Nigeria said that it worked with aid agencies to assist at least 3,000 people who were displaced due to the violence on a border area where the predominantly Christian north meets the majority Muslim northern part.

When the attackers arrived on Friday night, Talatu Agauta fled to Markudi, the capital of the state, and was pregnant with her second baby.

She returned home over the weekend and found that 40 bags of rice had been burnt. The blow was devastating, but it wasn't enough to make her leave her home.

She said, "I'm glad I came back. I don’t care if I die in this place." (Writing and editing by Andrew Heavens; MacDonald Dzirutwe)

(source: Reuters)