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LAGOS, Feb. 22 (Xinhuanet) -- Some 10,000 people have
been evacuated to safety at police stations and army barracks following
religious reprisal attacks in the southern Nigerian commercial city of Onitsha,
police said on Wednesday.
Anambra Po lice Commissioner Moses Anegbode told
reporters in the state capital Awka that they have increased the number of
policemen drafted to Onitsha from 2,000 to 4,000 to bring the riot under
control.
"The situation is under control. We have so far
evacuated people from their houses to the police stations and army barracks and
they are well protected," he said.
Dozens of people reportedly have been killed on
Tuesday as Christians torched religious houses and burned markets in Onitsha in
reprisal for Saturday's violence in northern Nigeria over the cartoons depicting
the Prophet Mohammad, in which at least 16 Christians were killed by Muslims.
The police boss described as untrue and misleading,
the speculations that the Hausa Muslims had mobilized their members to attack
and kill primary and secondary school children at Awada in Onitsha.
"I expect the public at this time to give us useful
information on how to control the situation and not to deceive the people
withtheir mobile phones."
Anegbode said his men had been positioned at
strategic areas including the Awka market, to forestall looting and killing.
Governor Chris Ngige of Anambra has imposed a
dusk-to-dawn curfew in Onitsha following Tuesday's reprisal attacks against the
Hausa Muslims by Christians.
On Saturday, at least 16 Christians were killed in
the northernstates of Borno and Katsina in the country's first violent protests
over the cartoons. The Christian Association of Nigeria, however, put the death
toll at over 50.
Religious clashes between Muslims and Christians are
common in the west African country of 130 million people, which are roughly
equally divided between Muslims in the north and Christians in thesouth.
There has been a wave of protests across the Islamic
world overthe cartoons first published in September by a Danish paper, which
have since been reprinted in Norway and other European countries. Enditem
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