KADUNA, Nigeria — The Nigerian police denied reports of simultaneous church attacks in northwestern Kaduna state over the weekend, even as residents shared accounts of the kidnapping in interviews on Tuesday.
A state lawmaker, Usman Danlami Stingo, told The Associated Press on Monday that 177 people were abducted by an armed group on Sunday. Eleven escaped, and 168 are still missing, according to the lawmaker and residents interviewed by the AP.
Kaduna State Police Commissioner Muhammad Rabiu said late Monday that police visited one of the three churches and "there was no evidence of the attack.''
He said the ''rumors'' were ''sponsored by people who are not happy with the relative peace that Kajuru has been enjoying since the coming of this administration."
It is common for police and locals to have contradicting accounts of attacks in Nigeria's hard-hit villages.
''I am one of the people who escaped from the bandits. We all saw it happen, and anyone who says it didn't happen is lying,'' said Ishaku Dan'azumi, the village head of Kurmin Wali.
A Kaduna-based Christian group, the Christian Solidarity Worldwide Nigeria, said in a press release that security operatives did not allow its members to visit the sites of the attacks.
''The military officer who stopped the CSWN car said there was a standing order not to allow us in,'' Reuben Buhari, the group's spokesperson, said.