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Aso A, a community located near Jumai Estate in Mararaba, a boundary area between Abuja and Nasarawa State, has been attacked by suspected herdsmen, leaving several persons dead and many others injured.
The Eastern Updates gathered that the attack, which began on Wednesday morning, has so far claimed no fewer than six lives, although the exact number of casualties remains unconfirmed.
Sources told Newsmen that the violence was triggered by an earlier clash between a farmer and a herder, which reportedly led to the death of the herder. The farmer, whose identity is yet to be established, was said to have fled shortly after the incident.
In apparent retaliation, suspected herdsmen reportedly stormed the residence of the fleeing farmer, attacking residents indiscriminately and setting houses ablaze. The situation escalated when community members attempted to resist the attackers, resulting in further destruction of property and loss of life.
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A video obtained by The Eastern Updates shows several houses engulfed in flames, while the body of one of the victims was seen being transported in a wheelbarrow to a nearby hospital.
A resident, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the entire community has been deserted, with many residents fleeing to neighbouring areas in Abuja and other safer locations.
As of the time of filing this report, a combined team of police and military personnel had been deployed to the area to restore order.
Meanwhile, a motorcyclist transporting a police officer to the scene was reportedly ambushed and killed by the attackers.
Although the exact death toll is yet to be officially confirmed, a community leader said tension remains high in Mararaba amid reports that more armed herdsmen may have been mobilised from Keffi for possible reprisal attacks.
Efforts to obtain an official response from the Divisional Police Officer of Aso A Police Division were unsuccessful, as the female Divisional Police Officer (DPO), who answered our call, declined to comment on the incident.
Nigerian Army troops killed scores of fighters linked to Bello Turji, the northwest’s most wanted bandit kingpin, in a coordinated offensive against his camps in Zamfara and Sokoto states on March 20, military sources said Monday — the latest in a sustained campaign against the armed network responsible for some of the most devastating mass kidnappings and community attacks in Nigeria’s volatile northwest over the past five years.
The operation, led by the 8 Division Strike Force of the Nigerian Army Sokoto, commenced at approximately 6:00 a.m. on March 20, targeting Turji’s camp deep inside Kagara Forest. The hideouts struck are located in Fakai community, straddling Shinkafi Local Government Area in Zamfara State and Isa Local Government Area in Sokoto State.
The two sites represent the geographic core of Turji’s operational base — a dense, cross-border forest terrain that has shielded his network from repeated security interventions and allowed it to range freely between the two states.
The operation did not proceed without cost or complication. During the advance into the forest, two combat support vehicles broke down near Maberaya village in Isa Local Government Area, temporarily halting troops’ forward movement. Bandits from Turji’s camp exploited the pause, launching an ambush from elevated positions and forest cover — a tactically sophisticated response that indicated a degree of advance intelligence or surveillance on the military column’s movement. Troops responded with superior firepower, engaging and neutralizing several bandits in the firefight. Three soldiers and one operative of the Department of State Services sustained injuries during the exchange and were evacuated to the 8 Division Military Hospital in Sokoto for treatment. The military did not confirm a specific death toll for the bandits killed, though multiple sources described the number as scores.
The operation also prompted military authorities to directly address a separate circulating claim. Reports had spread on Nigerian social media that more than 150 bandits drowned in a boat accident in the Sabon Gida area of Sokoto State — a narrative that military sources dismissed categorically. “The report alleging that over 150 bandits died in a boat accident is fake and should be disregarded,” a military source told the News Agency of Nigeria. The National Inland Waterways Authority’s area manager for Sokoto, Bello Bala, corroborated that dismissal, noting that the River Sabon Gida was not currently navigable and could not have been the scene of any waterborne event of the kind described.
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Bello Turji, whose full name is Turji Bello Jangebe, has occupied a singular position in the northwest’s security crisis for several years, operating from a base in the Fakai forests that straddles the Zamfara-Sokoto boundary and commanding a network estimated to number in the thousands. The Fakai-Kagara Forest axis has long been identified as a strategic enclave for bandit activity due to its dense terrain and proximity to multiple state boundaries — terrain features that make it resistant to conventional military clearance and allow fighters to evade across state lines when pressure intensifies in any single jurisdiction.
Turji’s trajectory within the northwest’s security landscape has followed a complicated and contested arc. He emerged as one of several prominent bandit commanders who engaged in peace dialogue with the Zamfara State government between 2021 and 2022 — a process that briefly reduced violence in some areas and produced his public appearance at a ceremony hosted by then-Governor Bello Matawalle. Those talks ultimately collapsed, and Turji subsequently resumed large-scale attacks that have included mass kidnappings of students, village raids, and the killing of soldiers and police officers across Zamfara, Sokoto, and Katsina states. He has been designated a global terrorist by the United States government, which imposed financial sanctions and travel bans on him in 2022 — a designation that has not constrained his operational capacity inside Nigeria.
Zamfara State has borne the heaviest cumulative toll of the northwest’s banditry crisis. Since 2011, thousands of civilians have been killed, tens of thousands displaced, and more than 35,000 people abducted for ransom across the state, according to estimates by the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data project. Agricultural activity across large parts of the state has been effectively suspended, with farming communities unable to access their land due to persistent threats from armed groups that have transformed the economic and demographic character of the state’s rural zones.




















