Nigerian state offers cows for guns to halt attacks

The new initiative was announced as military operations have failed to end the killings and local officials have tried repeated negotiations to broker peace in the restive northwestern Nigeria.

A herdsman climbs a tree to cut some vegetations for his animals during a shortage of grass in the mining town of Zamfara, Nigeria on April 21, 2016.
Reuters

A herdsman climbs a tree to cut some vegetations for his animals during a shortage of grass in the mining town of Zamfara, Nigeria on April 21, 2016.

Authorities in Nigeria's northwestern Zamfara state have offered two cows for each gun surrendered to halt bloody attacks by criminal gangs, including cattle rustlers.

Remote communities across the region have for years been hit hard by deadly raids from armed groups of motorcycle-riding cattle rustlers and kidnappers. 

Military operations have failed to end the killings and local officials have tried repeated negotiations to broker peace.

Zamfara governor Bello Matawalle said on Thursday that under the new initiative "for every rifle submitted by a repentant bandit, there would be compensation of two cows".

Matawalle said the offer of livestock was meant to convince the gangs, known as "bandits", to disarm without cash payments that could be used to buy more arms.

There was no indication if the plan would be enough to convince them to forsake their lucractive cattle rustling and kidnapping rackets.

READ MORE: 'Corpses were scattered': Gunmen kill dozens in Nigeria massacre

8,000 people killed since 2011

The unrest in northwestern Nigeria, which experts say has been spurred by overpopulation and climate change, has seen an estimated 8,000 people killed since 2011 and 200,000 flee their homes.  

President Muhammadu Buhari has pledged a fresh push to end the killings after a spike in attacks in neighbouring Katsina state. 

The "bandits" mainly come from the Fulani ethnic group that has long relied principally on cattle herding. 

Vigilante groups set up by local communities to defend themselves have been accused of extrajudicial killings that add to the spiral of killings.

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