0331 GMT March 08, 2021
Gunmen from kidnapping and cattle rustling gangs — called bandits by locals — often raid villages in northwest Nigeria, stealing cattle, kidnapping for ransom and burning homes after looting supplies, AFP wrote.
"Kaduna State Government has received reports from security agencies of the killing of 19 citizens in Birnin Gwari and Kajuru local government areas," Samuel Aruwan, internal affairs commissioner said in a statement.
"The citizens were killed by armed bandits at Kutemeshi village in Birnin Gwari and Kujeni village in Kajuru, where several others were left with bullet wounds," Aruwan said.
Late on Saturday, bandits riding on motorcycles killed 14 people and injured others when they invaded Kutemeshi where they looted shops, the official said.
On the same day motorbike-riding gunmen also stormed Kujeni where they killed five people and burnt "several" houses, warehouses and a church, said Aruwan in the statement.
But residents said 19 people were killed just in the raid in Kutemeshi.
Last month bandits killed 12 people and kidnapped 30 others in attacks on three villages in Birnin Gwari district and neighboring Katsina state.
Kidnapping and cattle rustling gangs maintain camps in the Rugu forest straddling Kaduna, Katsina, Zamfara and Niger states.
The gangs have no ideological leanings but there are concerns that the gangs may be gradually infiltrated by extremists from the northeast.
Violence across the northwest has killed 8,000 people since 2011 and displaced more than 200,000, some into neighboring Niger, according to a report last year by the International Crisis Group (ICG).