Some 25 people, mostly students, have been killed by unknown gunmen in
Mubi, a town in north-eastern Nigeria, police say. A local resident said at least 40 people had
been shot dead or stabbed. The killings come days after a major operation
against the Boko Haram militant group in the town, while others have linked
them to a dispute over student union elections. Rivalries over student
elections have turned violent before but have never reached this level, says one resident who wants to be anonymous. Mobile phone masts in the area were
recently attacked by Boko Haram militants, so getting information from Mubi is
difficult.Investigations were under way, said Adamawa
state police spokesman Mohammed Ibrahim, who had just visited the scene, adding
that the motive for the attack was not yet clear.But he said the attackers had
inside knowledge: "The attackers called the victims by name and killed
them."Two of the dead were security guards and the other an elderly
resident, said Mr Ibrahim.One resident who also did not want his name to be used,
told the BBC's Hausa service that men in military uniform went to a hall of
residence away from the Federal Polytechnic Mubi campus just before midnight,
got the students out of their rooms and ordered them to say their names.Some
were then shot dead and others stabbed with knives, and their bodies left in
lines outside the buildings.He said it was not clear why some were killed and
others spared - some of the dead were Muslim while others were Christian."Everybody
is scared," he said, adding that the shooting lasted for about two hours.He
added that students were now leaving the town, many with tree branches over
their cars - a traditional sign of neutrality in Nigeria.The authorities have
imposed an indefinite curfew in the town and ordered residents to stay indoors.The
university has been temporarily closed.Last week, the Nigerian military carried
out an operation in Mubi and arrested dozens of people over suspected links to
Boko Haram.Mubi is in Adamawa state, which has a mixed Muslim and Christian
population and borders Borno state, where Boko Haram came to prominence in
2009, staging an uprising in the state capital, Maiduguri.Boko Haram has not
yet commented on the Mubi attacks.It is fighting to establish Islamic law in
Nigeria and has killed more than 1,000 people in numerous attacks across
northern and central areas this year.
CREDIT: THE BBC
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