MELBOURNE, Australia — At least 26 people were killed by a gang in three remote villages in Papua New Guinea's north and eight villagers remained missing Friday in the latest violence in the South Pacific island nation relating to contested land ownership and sorcery allegations, officials said.
''It was a very terrible thing … when I approached the area, I saw that there were children, men, women. They were killed by a group of 30 young men," the acting police commander in East Sepik province, James Baugen, told Australian Broadcasting Corp. on Friday.
Baugen said all the houses in the villages had been burned and the remaining villagers had taken shelter at a police station, too scared to name the perpetrators.
''Some of the bodies left in the night were taken by crocodiles into the swamp. We only saw the place where they were killed. There were heads chopped off,'' Baugen said. He said the attackers were hiding and there were no arrests yet.
Chris Jensen, country director for the aid group World Vision, said 26 people were confirmed dead, eight were missing and 51 families were displaced from their homes in Angoram district on the crocodile-infested Sepik River, the longest river on New Guinea island.
''The trigger seems to be, as it is in most cases in PNG, a combination of a couple of things. But sorcery seems to be one of the triggers along with land ownership,'' Jensen told The Associated Press.
''An individual will get accused of sorcery and they may be the people who perhaps have some control over some assets or land,'' Jensen said.
U.N. Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Turk said in a statement Wednesday that the attacks happened on July 16 and July 18.