Africa News
Hospitals unable to cope with injured after clashes in Nigeria
Dec 1, 2008, 6:23 GMT
Nairobi/Abuja - Hospitals in Nigeria were Monday failing to cope with the number of casualties following weekend clashes between Christians and Muslims in the city of Jos, the capital of central Plateau State, reports said Monday.
Doctors were not able to keep up with hundreds of victims of gunshots and stab wounds, while severe shortages of medicines and dressing materials were also causing problems, a spokesman of the aid organization Oxfam told the British Broadcasting Corporation.
At least 200 people were reported killed in the clashes that erupted over the weekend after local elections in the state. A local cleric earlier estimated the number of fatalities at more than 300.
The Nigerian Red Cross Sunday also estimated that 10,000 people had fled the violence in Plateau state, which is located between the predominantly Islamic North and the Christian South of the country.
A federal spokesman blamed external forces for prompting the unrest. Some of those arrested in the clashes were from Chad and Congo, he told the BBC.
Jos has a history of sectarian violence between indigenous Christians and Muslim settlers. More than 1,000 people were killed in clashes seven years ago, and mosques, churches and other properties have been razed to the ground in the violence.

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a bushman & a foolDec 1st, 2008 - 10:03:40
Great article, except you're missing one crucial fact: Jos doesn't have a long history of violence as your post suggests. As you rightly pointed out, there has been only one within the 7 years ago. If you do a bit of digging, you'll find that Jos doesn't even come close to being the #1 city as far as fights & unrest go. That position also remains true if we only count conflicts influenced by religion (in Nigeria).
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