In yet another gruesome attack in Nigeria, suspected Boko Haram militants torched houses in a Nigerian village and killed at least 23 people, a local governor said Wednesday.
Gov. Kashim Shettima, the
leader of Nigeria's Borno state, told reporters that he personally saw
more than 23 bodies buried in the village of Konduga after an attack
Tuesday night.
"I do not know what to
call those barbarians that did this," Shettima said. "We cannot call
them Muslims, because Islam does not do this."
Boko Haram is an Islamist
militant group that has waged a campaign of violence in northeastern
Nigeria, trying to impose their strict version of Sharia, or Islamic
law.
Borno has been
particularly hard hit and is one of three states in the region that's
been under a state of emergency since May due to the bloodshed.
On January 26, for
instance, the state's police commissioner said that Boko Haram militants
opened fire on a village market and burned homes in the village of
Kawuri.
At least 45 people died
and another 26 were injured in this attack, which happened as suspected
militants on all-terrain vehicles shot at people while traders were
closing shop for the day, according to Borno state police commissioner
Lawan Tanko.

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