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Violence forces 23,000 Nigerians to flee to Niger

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At least 23,000 people escaping violence in north-western Nigeria have fled to neighbouring Niger in recent weeks, the UN refugee agency (UNHCR) has said.

The refugees were “mainly desperate women and children”, who had been allowed to seek protection in Niger despite border closures as a result of coronavirus pandemic, the UN agency said on Tuesday.

The UNHCR said that an additional 19,000 Niger nationals in the southern Maradi region had become displaced inside their own country “fearing and fleeing the same insecurity in the border areas”.

“Those fleeing speak of extreme violence unleashed against civilians, murders, kidnappings for ransom and pillaging and looting of villages,” the statement said.

The numbers fleeing have almost tripled from last year when the agency reported the first influx of 20,000 people following an insurgency and banditry in northern Nigeria that killed hundreds and displaced thousands.

Thousands of people in north-western states of Nigeria have fled to Niger

BBC

The flight to Niger takes the total number of refugees fleeing that part of Nigeria to more than 60,000 since the first wave in April last year, it said.

The latest have fled bloodshed in the Nigerian states of Katsina, Sokoto and Zamfara, the agency said.

The deadliest attack in Nigeria claimed 47 lives in Katsina state, the agency said.

This prompted air strikes by Nigerian security forces already stretched tackling a decade-long insurgency by Islamist group Boko Haram in the north-east.

Niger is also beset by jihadist violence, notably around Lake Chad, where the borders of Cameroon, Chad, Niger and Nigeria converge.

BBC

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