Nigerian ambush kills 46 police, blamed on local cult
Thu May 9, 2013 10:37am EDT
* State governor says local cult behind the attack
* Cult motivated by ethnic rivalries - security source
* President cuts short trip abroad (Adds details on who behind attack,
president)
By Anamesere Igboeroteonwu
ONITSHA, Nigeria, May 9 (Reuters) - Nigerian gunmen killed 46 police
officers in an ambush in the central state of Nassarawa this week, police
said on Thursday, but the governor there believed a lesser-known local cult
was behind the killings and not Boko Haram Islamists.
Boko Haram has waged a three-year insurgency in Nigeria, although it and
other Islamist groups tend to operate further north than Nassarawa. It is
suspected of launching a deadly assault on the northeastern town of Bama,
also on Tuesday.
President Goodluck Jonathan cut short his trip to South Africa and Namibia
to return home on Thursday and oversee efforts to contain threats to
Nigerian security, highlighted by this week's bloodshed.
"Forty-six police officers were killed about 10 km (6 miles) from Lafia by
members of a militia who had ambushed them on their way to an operation to
arrest the leader of the militia group," police spokesman Sergie Ezegam
said.
Local media quoted Nassarawa State Governor Tanko Al-Makura as saying the
attack was carried out by a cult called Ombatse, meaning "the time has come"
in the local Eggon language.
The group has attacked officials, churches and mosques in the past, he said,
but added that this week's assault signified a marked escalation in the
scale of its operations.
"Two weeks ago, we discovered a certain militia group holding arms and
carrying out cult activities in the state," Al-Makura was quoted as saying
in local papers.
"Since January, this thing has not abated and in the past two weeks, it has
taken on a totally different dimension."
Two security sources also said they did not think the attack on Nassarawa
was carried out by Boko Haram. The Ombatse group is motivated by ethnic
rivalries within the state, one security source said.
Boko Haram and offshoots such as the al Qaeda-linked group Ansaru, as well
as associated criminal networks, are seen as the main threat to stability in
Africa's top energy producer.
Although Boko Haram's attacks mostly occur in its northeast stronghold, its
reach has grown in the last year, while Ansaru's attacks included a siege on
a police barracks in the capital Abuja and violence further south.
Ansaru, dubbed a terrorist group by Britain, claimed responsibility for a
January attack in Kogi state on a convoy of Nigerian soldiers en route to
deployment with West African forces in Mali. Kogi is south of Abuja and
borders Nassarawa.
Western governments are increasingly concerned about Nigerian militants
linking up with other jihadist groups in West Africa.
Boko Haram wants to carve out an Islamic state in a country whose population
of 170 million is split roughly equally between Christians and Muslims.
Around 200 heavily armed suspected members of the group laid siege to the
northeastern town of Bama on Tuesday, leaving 55 people dead, the military
there said.
Attacks by Boko Haram have killed more than 3,000 people since 2009, based
on figures from Human Rights Watch. (Writing by Joe Brock; editing by Mike
Collet-White)
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Received on Thu May 09 2013 - 16:16:40 EDT