Nigeria head puts forces on alert

By BBC
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Many of the victims were cut with machetes, doctors said

Nigeria's acting President Goodluck Jonathan has ordered security forces to prevent more weapons being brought into the area around the city of Jos.

More than 100 people, many of them women and children, are believed dead after attacks in the area on Sunday.

Witnesses said the mainly Christian villages had been attacked from the surrounding hills by men with machetes.

Jos itself has been under curfew since January when at least 200 died in clashes between Christians and Muslims.

Military deployed
The attack happened before dawn on Sunday morning when gangs of men descended on several communities, centred on the village of Dogo-Nahawa, and attacked people with machetes, reports say.

A resident of Dogo-Nahawa said the attackers had fired guns as they entered the village.

"The shooting was just meant to bring people from their houses and then when people came out they started cutting them with machetes," Peter Jang told Reuters.

An aid worker with the Christian charity Stefanus Foundation, Mark Lipdo, said at least 100 people had been killed.

He told the BBC he went to the villages of Zot and Dogo-Nahawa after daylight on Sunday and recorded the names of 77 victims and said there were at least two dozen more bodies.

"We saw mainly those who are helpless, like small children and then the older men, who cannot run, these were the ones that were slaughtered."

He said Zot had been almost wiped out.
Other witnesses said they had also seen at least 100 bodies and a Plateau state official told Reuters news agency that more than 300 people had died.

A doctor at a hospital in Jos told news agencies that victims had been cut by machetes and burnt.

The military, which already has a presence in Jos, has sent troops to Dogo-Nahawa.

"The acting president has placed all the security forces in Plateau and neighbouring states on red alert so as to stem any cross-border dimensions to this latest conflict," Mr Jonathan's office said in a statement quoted by Reuters news agency.

He also ordered those behind the violence to be found.

Analysts say the attack seems to be in reprisal for the clashes between Christians and Muslims in January, which claimed the lives of at least 200 people and displaced thousands of others.

Hundreds of people have fled from Jos in the aftermath of the fighting, the Red Cross says.

Robin Waudo, a spokesman for the International Committee of the Red Cross, told the BBC his volunteers were assisting people wounded in the latest fighting.

"We know that late this morning there was some fighting in the south part of the city and it seems like there are reprisal attacks from what happened a few weeks ago," he said.