Gunmen have asked troops of the Nigerian Army to vacate their post around a village in Miango in the Bassa Local Government Area of Plateau State, TheCable reports.
A company of soldiers was recently deployed to the area, following reported attacks on the villagers by gunmen.
The troops, working under the army’s operation Safe Haven (OPSH), had in the past two months stopped the attackers from invading the villagers.
Insiders
knowledgeable about the operation said that the attackers had written
to the villages, asking them to inform the troops to leave their
location as they planned to attack the community.
“We strategically
put our troops in a border area between the village and the mountains
from which their attackers come from,” TheCable quoted one of the
sources as saying.
“Many times, they have tried to jump on the
village but they were stopped by the troops in heavy crossfires. In the
past one month, we’ve had gunfights with them and lost two of our
soldiers.
“Just a few days ago, the villagers brought a note from the
attackers, asking the troops to leave that location so that they could
attack. In fact, they threatened that if our soldiers didn’t leave, they
would be the first to be attacked.”
Military sources said the development had already been communicated to the operation’s headquarters.
Some army commanders in the area were said to have earlier attempted to broker peace between the attackers and the villagers.
One of the leaders of the attackers, sources said, was invited for a dialogue when some farmers were killed on their farmlands.
“Because
they can’t enter into the village and launch an attack, as soldiers
won’t allow them, they now wait for some farmers to enter their farmland
and from there they go to attack them,” a source explained.
“It
could be difficult to ask soldiers to now follow each villager to the
farm, so we thought we could broker peace through dialogue with those
guys.
“We made a call through, and an agreement was reached that they
won’t attack the villagers again. Then at least, we had about three
weeks gone and there was no attack on any farmer.
“It was shocking to see their latest threat, but our troops are on standby and we won’t allow them to take over that village.”
Onyema Nwachukwu, the Nigerian Army spokesperson, was not immediately available to comment on the development.
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