Some farming communities in Borno state is currently deep agony following the killing of 13 farmers by members of Boko Haram terrorists. This is the second time in three years that the community witnessed this manner of brutality.
Survivors recount that the 13 farmers were beheaded on their farmlands in Mafa Local Government in the central part of Borno on Sunday evening. They were buried yesterday at Zabarmari, a farming community some 25 kilometres to Maiduguri, the state capital.
Residents said the farmers, who hailed from neighbouring villages of Koshebe and Karkut, were thrashing grains on the farm when Boko Haram members fell on them.
“They came in groups from different directions and cornered people on the farm, though some escaped. They started beheading the people they caught,” Abubakar Yusuf, a farmer and survivor told Daily Sun on phone.
He said the attack occurred at about 5pm on Sunday, adding that some were also missing during the incident.
“We don’t know if some of those missing have been kidnapped by Boko Haram or are in the bush trying to locate their way home. We have buried 13 today (Monday),” said Ahmad Khali, a Zabarmari resident.
A member of the Civilian Joint Task Force (CJTF) told the SUN on condition of anonymity the insurgents may have parked their motorcycles somewhere in the bush to avoid security and sneak into the farmland.
In another attack in Bama Local Government also, on Sunday, Boko Haram killed a farm owner and kidnapped four workers on the farm, residents said. The attack on Zabarmari farmers came barely three years after the community experienced a similar incident.
Boko Haram had beheaded over 100 farmers from Zabarmari on farmlands in November 2020. The incident attracted national outrage and sympathy from many government officials, including a Federal Government delegation and UN humanitarian office in Nigeria.