Source: AP / The Washington Post
Kaduna, Nigeria — More than 200 people have been brought to St. Gerard’s Hospital, including a preschool-aged girl whose chin was bandaged. Authorities have been fearful of releasing casualty figures for fear of inciting more violence, but at least 67 deaths had been reported across the north, including 20 who died at this hospital.
In the morgue lay the bodies of victims shot, burned and in one case disemboweled in rioting that swept Kaduna in the aftermath of Saturday’s presidential vote.
Officials have arrested more than 300 people in Kaduna alone in an attempt to restore order, and a curfew that had been in place was being lifted until dusk.
Muslim rioters burned homes, churches and police stations after results showed Nigeria’s President Goodluck Jonathan, a Christian, had beaten his closest Muslim opponent. Reprisal attacks by Christians began almost immediately, with one mob allegedly tearing a home apart to look for a Quran to prove the occupants were Muslims before setting the building ablaze.
To read this article in its entirety visit The Washington Post.
Sphere: Related Content
Related Posts
Source: Leila Fadel / The Washington Post
Cairo - On Wednesday, former Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak is expected to appear inside ...
READ MORE
Source: AP / The Washington Post
Pretoria, South Africa - Michelle Obama is fond of saying there’s no magic to her ...
READ MORE
Source: Leila Fadel and Simon Denyer / The Washington Post
Benghazi, Libya — A rebel council in the de facto capital ...
READ MORE
Source: Colum Lynch / The Washington Post
United Nations — Ivory Coast strongman Laurent Gbagbo’s top three generals have offered to ...
READ MORE
Source: Stephanie McCrummen / The Washington Post
Bagdad - At least nine people were killed in Iraq on Friday as tens ...
READ MORE
Source: Thomas Erdbrink / The Washington Post
Tehran - Crowds of demonstrators battled security forces armed with tear gas and batons ...
READ MORE
Source: Sudarsan Raghavan / The Washington Post
ADEN, YEMEN - President Ali Abdullah Saleh, moving to head off the kind of ...
READ MORE
Source: Jeffery Gettleman / The New York Times
IWAWA ISLAND, Rwanda — A few months ago, Gasigwa Gakunzi was hanging ...
READ MORE
Source: Sudarsan Raghavan / The Washington Post
The U.S.-backed government of Somalia and its Kenyan allies have recruited hundreds of Somali ...
READ MORE
Source: John Pomfret/The Washington Post/MSNBC
China's government has embraced an increasingly anti-Western tone in recent months and is adopting policies ...
READ MORE
From Palace To Cage, Former Egyptian President Mubarak
Michelle Obama Aims To Inspire Youth Leaders During
Libyan Rebels Reject African Union Cease-Fire Proposal
U.N.: Ivory Coast Leader Gbagbo’s Top Generals Offer
Nine Killed In Iraq’s ‘Day Of Rage’ Protests
Anti-Government Protests Spread To Iran
Yemen’s President Moves To Head Off Unrest, Vows
Seeking Order, Rwanda Pursues the Poor and Dissenters
Somali refugees recruited to fight Islamist militia
Newly powerful China defies Western nations