Baba Alakyo, the spiritual leader of the
Ombatse, an Eggon group, was feared killed alongside the village head in an
early morning raid on Alakyo, near Lafia, Nasarawa State yesterday, Daily Trust
learnt.
Alakyo is the village where about 74
security operatives were ambushed and killed on May 7, 2013. It was burnt down
along with other Eggon settlements of Fadaman Bauna and Akura, displaced
persons said. Scores were said to have been killed.
The invasion
happened barely a day after Governor Umaru Tanko Al-Makura led a peace walk
round Lafia, the state capital in celebration of his 62nd birthday.
Barrister Zachary Zamani Allumaga, Legal
Adviser of the Ombatse group which has been proscribed by the state government,
said information available to him showed that Baba Alakyo and the village head
of Alakyo were killed in the raid which he blamed on the Fulani. He however
later sent a text message to say the information on the killing of Baba Alakyo
may have been cooked by “those who don’t mean well for peace”.
He
said Fulani gunmen stormed Alakyo from four directions, killed scores and burnt
property.
Villagers said the raid was carried out at
about 5:30am, taking the villagers by surprise. It was difficult to locate any
source within the village, but persons displaced from neighbouring settlements
told Daily Trust that heavy and sustained gunfire was heard at dawn in the
village.
They said a large band of militia group
suspected to be members of the Ombatse tried to enter Alakyo to save the
settlement but went late as it had already been taken by the Fulani militia.
They said the Fulani militia also burned down four brand new Toyota Hilux vans.
The militia was said to have also entered Fadaman Bauna and Akura, two other
Eggon settlements and raided them, killing dozens. An Eggon leader who hails
from Akura told Daily Trust on phone that he narrowly escaped death, calling it
genocide against his tribe.
He said: “From the information we have
received, Baba Alakyo was killed”. Allumaga, the Ombatse leader, alleged that
the Fulani came from Wamba, a neighbouring local government area.
Hussaini Mohammed, the state secretary of
the Miyetti Allah, a Fulani group, denied that Fulani people were on genocide
against the Eggon people, just as he
denied knowledge of any invasion by his tribesmen.
The state’s Head of Service, Dr. Dominic
Bako, escaped death when he ran into a road block mounted by gunmen along the
Lafia-Akwanga road during the bloody violence. Bako was shot on his left arm
and was rushed to Lafia where he was treated at the Dalhatu Araf Specialist
Hospital. He could not identify the
gunmen, but said they were in a large number and had gathered along the road.
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