Thursday, October 17, 2024

Gang kills women and children in Papua New Guinea massacre – reports

(BBC News) Dozens of villagers have reportedly been killed after a gang of young men launched a series of attacks in a remote region of Papua New Guinea.

Survivors of the massacre have described hearing their neighbours’ cries of pain, and watching as others were speared as they tried to flee the gang in canoes.

At least 26 people – including 16 children – were killed, local media reported, with fears the death toll may rise as the search for survivors continues.

United Nations human rights chief Volker Türk said the “shocking” violence seemed to be “the result of a dispute over land and lake ownership and user rights” and appealed to officials to “ensure those responsible are held to account.”

Governor Allan Bird told Australia’s ABC News there were just 20 police officers for the 100,000 people who live in the Angoram district of East Sepik province where the attack took place.

National police have arrived in the region to help with the investigation – more than a week after the violence took place.

But according to local media, police already know the identities of the more than 30 men who carried out the attacks July 16-18.

The gang – who Angoram police Inspector Peter Mandi said called themselves “I don’t care”, according to the Guardian – were armed with guns, knives and axes, attacking in the early hours.

They allegedly raped and killed their victims, setting numerous homes alight.

Provincial police commander Senior Inspector James Baugen described to the Post Courier how bodies had been left “rotting” in the village, while others had been taken by crocodiles after floating down the river.

He added that many of the dead were mothers and their children.

Gov. Bird said law and order had been on the decline in the region for the last six months.

It was thought land ownership was also the cause of a similarly shocking attack in Papua New Guinea’s Highlands in February, in which 26 people were killed.

A year ago, escalating tribal conflict over land and wealth led to a three-month lockdown in Enga province, during which police imposed a curfew and travel restrictions.

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cpwdp58z3gjo

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