At least 15 village traders were shot dead in northern Nigeria's Zamfara state as they returned from a market on Thursday night.
The
local police commissioner told AFP that armed robbers waylaid the
traders, who were travelling in an open truck, and opened fire. They
burnt some of the bodies in the truck.
The agency reports that villagers said 100 people came out of the bush and stopped the truck.
The attackers' motive may be robbery.
The
incident reportedly occurred close to the town of Birnin Magaji,
several hundred kilometres west of Kano, where nearly 200 people were
killed in a wave of gun and bomb attacks last week.
The BBC's
Haruna Shehu Tangaza in the neighbouring state of Sokoto says the
trouble may be linked to several incidents in the village of Lingyado in
Zamfara state.
Earlier last year, vigilantes from Lingyado
evicted a group of people from the village who they suspected of being
behind a series of cattle and other robberies.
Those flushed out
regrouped and attacked the village with heavy weaponry - including
rocket-propelled grenades - a few months later, killing 26 villagers.
Some
believe the attack on Thursday night has the hallmarks of the group as
the traders from Birnin Magaji village were ambushed and set alight, our
reporter says.
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