Communal clashes leave 150 dead in Nigeria
14,000 people were also displaced last week, says state-run relief agency’s official

By Rafiu Ajakaye
LAGOS, Nigeria
At least 150 people were killed and several thousand others displaced in communal clashes last week in Nigeria's oil-rich southern Cross River state, an official of the state-run relief agency said Tuesday.
“Between June 27 and June 29 the people of Wanikade and Wanihem communities both in the Yala Local Government Area of the state were involved in a communal war,” News Agency of Nigeria quoted John
“As a result of the bloody war, 14,000 people have been displaced, 1,233 houses were destroyed, while over 150 persons have lost their lives,” he added.
Speaking to Anadolu Agency, state police spokeswoman Irene
She could not confirm the death toll put forth by the relief agency, but added: "Over a hundred houses were burnt and several persons were displaced but calm has now returned to the communities."
Cross River, like a few other Nigerian states with multiple ethnic groups, is notorious for intercommunal clashes often caused by disputes over land ownership or sociopolitical rivalries.
In mid-June, over 100 people were killed in similar clashes in the Mambilla plateau area of the northeastern Taraba state.
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